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THE STAR—MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1912. Why Don't Yu LeaniQ@RANTLAND RICE PICKSALL AMER to Roller Skate? Grantiand Rice, the New York baseball expert, who covered the a hy If you really knew what an en-| world’s series games for Tho Star, was selected, last week, by Collier's |for on of the largest publi¢ations in the world you would! which he considers best in the world for the national game Appearee | Pet, of aiving the fans the best obtainable. t q in the last issue, Value placed on the opinion of this expert could be | selections are: hb eel: it is exhilarating; | no better exemplified than by the fact that he was the selection from | Catchere—Meyers, New York, and Archer, Chicago. the surroundings are pleasant, The | === ee aera re Broadway Rink, near the Broadway , High School, under the efficient SCOOP management of Mr. H. Q, Koller,! olse rolierskating ts, Ri a. = — _ The Evidence Was All in T. R.’s Favor THE CUB REPORTER owner and manager, has a skating surface 150 feet long and 65 feet wide. It ts equipped with the very . Iatest in ball bearing roller skates. The attendants are courteous and they know thetr business; the best * of order ts maintained at all times, Come out this evening, Ladies will be admitted free this evening. Gen eral admission 10c;. skates 26¢ Remember the place, T11 Bast Pine, near roadway High School VEGETABLE SILK Sulphurro Baths FOR RHEUMATISM —READ BOOKLET— RICHARDS TELLS HOW CE KICKING BEGAN IT'S QUEER NOBODY THOUGHT) whereby the catching side has | developed. OF THE “PLACE KICK" TILL | earned the right to a freekick,/and with the cooperation of his 1897-—-THE ROMANTIC STORY | were long in use. teammates, became a constant seer OF ITS EARLY VICTORIES. The idea oi using the place-kick |ing asset for the Indians. —— under the trying ciroumstances of P. J. O'Dea, Wisconsin, was a The writer @f these romantic/4 scrimmage developed Into tang! |great place and drop-kicker and ts football stories is a brilliant West-| ble results in 1897. The first time jcredited with the longest,drdap- ern coach who starred at Wiscon-|it was used was in a game between kick and placekick from perim-| proportions. A great sin in 1904, and has had splendid | Notre Dame and Chicago univers! jmage ever «made in Anprida,| showed over his right temple. success coaching Colorado, Wiscon- | ties. |O'Dead dropped a goal nwt | body sin and Ohio state university teams.| The Notre Dame coach, Earl Northwestern from the 63-yard Une, | bruises. He is full of football history, and| Herring, developed and practiced made a place-kick from 58-|& laugh escaped other of the high spots | the play before going into the game, yard line against Ulinols. |but he doubted its legality Parke H. Herring consulted the referee be | now a well-known lawyer BY JOHN R. RICHARDS fore the game, explained the play, A new way of scoring was in-|and asked his opinion. Jobo ©. goals made from drop and vented with the firet use of the | Sarel of Wisconsin, known to foot | kicks in 26 series of games. be-| yet hin playing is ball fame as “Iky" Karel, was the gins with eastern games Of Ube | exmeernmmeme place-kick from scrimmage. This | referee, and he decided the play to 70's and includes also a few teans | kick fs made by placing = player|/be legal. Karel ts now Judge of the West. This list shows 148| from eight to 12 yards behind cen- ee ggg goals in important oy ie OK is game The Eastern teams are t ter, to whom the ball is passed bY | right the ball Into Chicago's terr!-|with 124 goale, and the Wester the center. Another player stands | tory and on the first attempt nego teams with 24. Fourteen Bastern a fow feet back of this first man, tiated a goal from placement from teams, however, are considered tn and aa the ball ts placed on the | the 35-yard line, scoring five points. |this it and for a period of 35 ground and beld in position, the| Following the introduction of the |yoars. Three Western teams are second player kicks It. |play by Notre Dame in 1897, It be- considered, covering 15 years, This All this fs done while the Iine|came a regular part of the agers | gives the Bastern teams about one and disengaged backs are blocking |sive play of the football teams of | quarter of a goal per team petyear opponents to prevent spoiling the |the country, The East adopted it} The fact brought out by this com- Just Printers 1013 THIRD AVENUE IN 1043 IND. 5200 ALBERT HANSEN Established 1883 PRECIOUS STONES, FINE JEWELRY, STERLING SILVER Corner First and Cherry SEATTLE BY AR. C. WRIGHT He mastered fects of wear. Phone Main 963 Eyres Transfer Co. Office 114 Jackson St. Notre Dame My fore the application of the kick in | 1903, De Witt's place-kicking caused Christmas eve is coming, a scrimmage was thought out./trouble for all the teams on the Place-kicks for goal after a touch-| Princeton schedules, down had been in use for years. Peto Houser, Carlisle, is prob- Place-kicks following a faircatch, | ably the greatest place-kicker ever Long Tom Fishback’s di ton + re coming to ay . that they the wrong Dr mm OWN. ‘ge Of the oftt- t h the jon | of nd Tha Dent D for first of psenty of ‘iret class work I figured tat this was the Kguntation upon whieh tae AMERICAN CAFE Fourth and Pike. Ernest Gianetti, Proprietor Cabaret Vaudeville 8 p. m, to 1 a. m, AMATEUR NIGHT EVERY FRIDAY CASH PRIZES. Contestants apply to BE. K. Maitland, Director, Thursday, 2p. m French Dinner With Bottle of Wine, 50c Ballard Business Directory ge GUIDED BY THE ADVER. iE TS IELOW. THEY ARE —& AND WILL MEET YOUR EVERY WANT DAIRY BRICK ICE CREAM f Three Flavors, Try It. You'll Like It. Royal Dairy, 5426 Leary Av. EMBALMERS Ballard Sheet Metal Works t as ¥. simpsoa “PHONE = BepuRNacr wom" OUR SPECIALTY Ballard Sheet Metal Works ‘Bkylights, Blow Piping, Conductors Gutters, mote — Testaurant General Mill and Boat Work THE MODERN “PL ACE- FOOTBALL IN THE MUD BY FRED HENRY Before the largest crowd that has yet turned out to the Madison park field, Lincoin and Queen Anne fought to a tie Saturday in one of the most bitter and best fought gkames ever witnessed on a local gridiron. There was no score. Although the mud was ankle deep and miniature lakes occupied a large space on the field, the game was prettily played, and fumbles were few. During the entire four quarters the ball see-sawed back and forth from one team to the other, It was seldom that the yardage was made, and the plays became routine, three downs and a punt. Lincoln made two attempts to forward pass, but the slippery oval refused to be con- trolled. In the first quarter the ball remained in Queen Anne's ter- ritory most of the time, but in the second quarter Queen Anne kept the ball around Lincoln's goal. Towards the close of this quarter Crim, a Lincoln halfback, sprinted around the end for large gain: bringing the ball to Queen Ann territory in the last few minutes of play. FOOTBALL SCORES U. of W. 55, Bremerton 0. Whitman 20, U. of Oregon 0. Lineoln 0, Queen Anne 0. Tacoma 30, Spokane 6. Dartmouth 20, Willlama 0. Harvard 46, Amherst 0. Swarthmore 21, Navy 6. Yale 6, Army 0. Brown 30, Pennsylvania 7. Cornell 6, Penn. State 29 Wash. and Jeff. 51, Tech, 0. Lehigh 56, Haverford 0. Indians 45, Pittsburg 8. Franklin and Marshall 10, Johns Hopkins 3. HEAR BETTER AUDIPHONE With Latest Instantaneous Adjustment. Its wonderful abli ity to gently, surely penetrate awaken the dorm ear, Is the r many of our Carnegie Hearing With Kase and Comfort you can obtain an Audiphone for a ton payment of a mmall ren’ To the Voters— Wilson? SERIES NO. 1 Do you know that the high cost of living in Seattle is due in part to the exorbitant rents paid by the retail merchants? Read carefully the following: The valuation of the land, only, on First, Second and Third Avenues, between Pike Street and Yesler Way, is $50,000,000, as shown by the books of the County Assessor. This high value is due to the fact that the business area of Seattle is practically limited to these three streets. (It has been so limited be- cause of the steep hills to the Eastward. In fact, it is prac- tically limited to First and Sece ond Avenues.) Six per cent. on $50,000,000 is $3,000,000 a year. The total amount of taxes paid by the citizens of Seattle last year was $3,039,000. Tribute to downtown land- lords, $3,000,000 a year. Total taxes paid, $3,039,000 a year, Do you know that Hart, Schaffner & Marx, clothiers, pay the landlord $30,000 a year rent; J. S. Graham, Baillargeon Building, $30,000; Singerman & Sons, clothiers, Lumber Ex- change Building, $24,000 a year; Rhodes’ 10c Store, $20,- 000; that the rent of Shafer Bros., University and Second Avenue, on an old lease, paid $10,000, and on the expiration of this lease Shafer Bros, were unable to make a renewal at $24,000? Rents on Second Avenue are steadily increasing, in some cases 50 per cent a year, while rents in other portions of the city are decreasing. Does not this explain why downtown landlords are oppos- ing the location of the Court House on the flat area North of Pike Street? Does it not explain why they fear their land monopoly will cease when the great flat area North of Pike Street is opened as a business center? The public can be saved at least $1,000,000 yearly in rent by expanding the business area, Vote to locate the County Court House on the site three blocks North of Pike Street, and you will make such expansion with this great sav- ing immediately possible. Watch the downtown land- lords spend the rent you have paid them to persuade you to locate the Court House at Third and James Street. Seattle Civic Center" Association Watch for Series No, II. in Tuesday's Star. L. D. LEWIS, President. O. H. P. LA‘FARGE, Secretary. ICAN CLUB FOR 1912). T ‘ i liowed out its season's | Athiet' foyable as well as healthful exer) Weekly to pick an All-Amertoan baseball elub, and the aggregation | that The Star's sporting department has follow Se" it aceedaen BEATEN AND BRUISED, — Friday night, when Chapman, the the art,! game little freshman from Kirk | land, enme fn from the U. of W.! said in the dressing room. football practice; he showed the ef is no stopping him, yet be is the His right ey@ was) lightest closed and discolored. His nose) light to be real Varsity material.” was swollen to twice its normal) jo ia the right halfback on Wash-| sweater, possibly, or playing in the| Take it Davia, Princeton, '9%,|tngton’s scrub team-—the hammoef) bix games, but by making the var. in Peete. with which Coach Doble pounds bis| sity team what it should be-—a solid| The bat is mightier than the pen. sylvania; bas conpiled a of| Yarsity line into shape. No one off) stone wall of defense, the team has heard of Chapman, amount the sensation| down. eoeeee e Se pteete ot! tetliansce peqreeny inl” Standing On missed on the Pullman line. Tom ie helping his father campaign for state insurance commissioner, and if he tears up the opposing line as he did of yore, there will be nothing to it but the heavyweight can- The Red Sox banked on beating the Giants all the time. banked the long end of the ner 4 When the Giants won the world’s title from the Athletics, In 1905, the winners got $1,142 each for thelr trouble. same boys drew more than twice as much for losing. perous times, how can you expect the diamond stars to vote for Luther McCarty may be a real white hope, and again he may turn out to be only a Slight Hope. Gigsle, gigsh i ; ; » Chicago; o ld’ baseball aggregation | Walter Johnson, Washington; Joe Wood, Boston; Ed Walsh GO ee nrouat pebtaiioné ia. the world ‘tt iw positive proot| Mathewson, New York, and Nap Rucker, Brooklyn. First-—Mcinnes, Shortetop—Hans Wag Outfield—Ty Cobb, ond—Eddie Collins, Athletics. ner, Third—Frank Baker, Athletics. Detroit; Pitchere—| ington, by “u0P” THE BAT VERSUS rd BY GRANTLAND RICE The Red Sox players received, for | winning the world's series, & week's work, about $4,000 each Goldsmith got ten bones they say, For writing the “Deserted Village,” Doc Homer had to beg his way, 4 When there was no free lunch to © itrwer = pillage, = Burns was a very seldom feeder, | Whe only dined well now and then, There's nothing to it, gentle reader, The bat is mightier than the pen Not all of Byron's stock was par, Old Dante crabbed and he had rea sons, sone. Shelley was broke and Keats, the the moleskin-clad huskies leader, who battle every afternoon on|Of finished verse, oft Denny field. “He plays like a “ten.” fiend,” one of the first team men| There's nothing to It, gentle reader, “There|The bat is mightier than the pen among borrowed man on the squad—too) all of us know Shakespeare's verse, How fast he was, how keen and Saturday he was on the foot shifty, red bruise! ball field again, in spite of brulses|yot 1 will bet the largest purse, His| and bangs; and in the end he and/ That William split was shy eight was mottled with black; his fellows on the “scrubs” will fifty But when his lips opened | “make” the varsity—not in the) Why even I, though a daily breeder, | wens of wearing a purple and gold|Of high-brow dope, oft beg a yen— from me—believe me— reader— which no of battering can break Simple Mixture Helps : + Seattle People That simple remedies are best has again been proven. Swif' Pharmacy, Second ay, and Pike et., reports that many people are re- | ceiving QUICK benefit from simple | buckthorn bark, glycerine, ete, as mixed in Adlert-ka, the German appendicitis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE helps sour stomach, gas on the stomach and constipation IN. STANTLY because this simple mix. ture antisepticizes the digestive or- Z kick. The place ts a little slower)and J. R De Witt of Princeton, n |pitation is the prevalence of kick-|%¢ Pushed his face against Lonnt ) Austin's oncoming right. cans and draws off the Impurit . rop- came the first great place-kicker o! ‘ern football. eave ses ‘ Thasaiik vie used long be-| that section, In 1901, 1902 and tng in Wook eee The Giants will soon have another chance to hang up the Sox— sasha eaker, Boston; Jackson, Cleveland, and Milan, Wash-| =, THE PEN Imitators try to defraud your ch § $30 su TRACIE 905 1-27 li \V ALBANY 880006 Albany Cut, De - 7 p There ts not a Dental the world where the very tal work cowts so te ago we started the «r | We do exactly the class of work on other we would want done a mouths, and our os and consultation costs Jou, THE BWST ARTIFICNL ta, gold fillers of teeth, and Dentists, and a ,are beyond all questi | ever offered in tt! prices will contings bringing us ree: we desire and We guarantee al : years. 1 and see find we do « ; Our work ip the ur | the lowest Seat oe | ALBANY CUT RATS (Second Floor = | ‘Take Elevator or # | Our Prices win | "Der Work Will Z They at the finish. oe This year the In these pros- NEWS NOTES OF — SPORT EVENTS The Knights of Columbus hung it onto the Iroquois yesterday by a score of 7 to 4, and claim the city enuionshlp in consequence. The Shaner & Yollt aggregation also has claims of that description, and owing to the lateness of the season the two teams may have no chance to meet and settle the dispute, North Yakima trimmed Ellens- burg at football on Saturday, 18 to Wenatchee won from Bell- to 0, The Yakima game Pennants worth $22.50 disappear. ed from the wall of the Masonic Temple in Spokane after the dance which followed the Tacoma-Spokane game, Police searched the Tacoma players and their baggage, but in vain. Somebody else did it. NAP RUCKER Star twirler, with the neartall- end Brooklyne, who gets deserved recognition by being picked for the All-American Baseball club. COAST LEAGUE RESULTS Oakland 1-7, San Francisco 3-1, Portland 7-8, Los Angeles 4-4, Sacramento 2, Vernon 1. Standing of the Clubs W. I. Pet, Oakland 115 87 Vernon . 2 Los Angeles Portland San Fran Sacramento MODERN tes at Hotel Vir- ginus, Eighth and Virginia, Westlake, Elliott 803, their Rights by offering substi HOLSUI BREAD | These substitutes two things—First, and on every account worthy of imitation. Second, that the ‘ bakers lack orig- inality and their bread —<— ~~ oy yy ity. it ghildren have HOLSUM. and all the Rights that go with it. Pure; untouched by human hands. ; Direct to your kitchen, wrapped. uF Don't take a bun for a loaf—demand the 32 ounce loaf of your dealer, HOLSUM BAKING CO ir ‘ancouver Seattle ... a Arrive SAILING FROM PIER 1. City Office, 113 Second Avenue. DIRECTORY BY DISTE This Directory Is Placed Here to Advise You of the Business in Your Own Locality. Patronize These —They Depend on You for Support Fremont Distric COAL AND WOOD _| DRUGS McMULLEN & CO. 7735.00 BOOK, i Phone us for your Coal and Wood. |store we will Rees burg's Home Recipes —PxoNRS— Pifice, M. 28, Ind, Red 58. FREMONT DRU After 6 p. m., Green 47: White 460. | , | Woodland F | INTERLAKE FUBLS 1319 N. 46th 3400 _ CLOVER LEAF DAIRY, Inc. North 289; White 686. CLOVERLEAF DAIRY [N, 908, N. 316 Most Complete and Sanitary Dalry | INTERLAKE om: ton ee |wood and Coal, 12 Quarts for $1.00, | and