The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1913, Page 11

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THE STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1913. e ‘An VARSITY MANAGER BACK FROM JAPAN ph REAT IT, YOU PORCH ROB BER! BROADWAY IN POOR "eccsacscsnc!|COLLINS AND BAKER 7 jcccscs sce WIN FOR ATHLETICS : SHAPE FOR TACOMA the was pot even in unt 00 ) participate of la grippe, It always plugging Jerson r find it necessary to change signals. od that Coach Bell high second team r at the Broadway and ts said to have Posed especially for PILEW! 1 ABOUT DON'T THIS! KNOW VANCOUVER, B, C,, Oct. 10 It te unilkely that the Chicago Wh Sox and t New rk Gt who will leave here next th on their tout around the world, will play an exhibitt kame here, The terms quoted are too high fo ame at this time ¢ the year when the | weather Is so unsettled. President Dugdale of the Se | attle club will put up a $1,000 | guarantee for the game to be played In Seattle. o CHALLENGE FROM TACOMA A challenge from the manager of the Tacoma Y. M. C. A. Indoor base ball team for » Tace aasocia t of O¢ day, a chalk talk Douthitt, physteal ai rector acoma players and Seattle assoctation, and tr of play was ly acc Doutht team fr Glants and Athletics, Broadway tackle, the two teams now engaged fn a His place will| world's Indoor series on the Y. M rpenter IC. A. floor. ™ . || RANDOM SHOTS |: Those of you who have not yet; George Stovall be appointed man 20. ugh courage to gamble/ager of the Mud Hens, maybe seeds on the series had bet-| around ne August circulating a t until one squad or the oth-| recall THEATRE BUILDING) © 23:2 suo Sa, tion dollars. | Walter Johnson has signed for) cee Second and Spring qn aaa The national commission ts now planning to figure out a | new systen for the sertes Games next year. Can you Giants the last three cracks at the champlonship of the world? Will Tell You How to . - — e Make $10 in a Few . a6 6 . There'll be a few gazooks who Minutes. Ask won't be able to spring that same old bull, “I told you so,” on us when it’s all over—MAYBE. Lamp ‘em, girls | John McGraw—The Giants should easily win. Larry Doyle—Cinch for New York. UPSTAIRS Billy Suntey—New York without | Matty—-We'll knock their blocks 204 EMPRESS THEATRE BUILDING President Lynch—It will be Na tional league triumph. eee Having persisted In parting with our zimzums by placing them the McGraw outfit for two years,| by no means possessed with t to give up. Today I've the Giants to win tics. Always Thusly Those Toledo folks who are cir leulating a petition asking that bellion, ext season gor the paltry salary of| 2.500. No wonder the down |trodden ball players are in open re eee trips to the plate, he hae torn | The University of Washington! off 25 hits, an average of exact. ee ° e eleven will again appear ore the) ly 424. was Gattreayr pining” cn| JN Ue Ghme. partda® Calling pirt oO ur ig upiee Bremerton has been to bat 54 times and Tl eee delivered 22 hits, an average | | ft) Some time ago it was thought of 408. Let this sink in for a | . * ’ ee ” that "the tay eon te re a. ponder the | During our business career we have That’s why we feel “jubilant,” and See etill res. 4 . Needhan Rollo, Yes! They had t sought hoi build —, a patronage by the Begins that is why we want to shake hands ood te that man's eye the aa ~ . : Le vate an with all our old friends, and make the ac. .- © whisper, * deal with our cs and thus deserve the T SS Oe oan we Pew at lnat ’ c . A fighte Bult, ina, is named ent pite nina sta: | tonfidence of those who trade with us. The ]/ omorrow quaintance of scores of new friends. And in George Chip. Got the name from| — Look at the Figure: | eaten has been our reward demon order to make the Friendship Event a big carrying one around on his sboul-| What ball club can show three strates that we have done this, and that our |] Qf} as ; ie" f Be IEE | der, probably. |better twirlers than Ma | policy of nest, legitimate merchandising, a jubilee, not only for us but for everybody cee | sarecare and Tesreau on a year's} marking goods on a plain-figure-close-margin ar that comes, we offer two most remarkable — — — -_ ‘or C it - “or + See i? F | and weil est hath ped msiane profit basis, never resorting to the make- One Solid Friendship Event opportunities—for the men, h wan 'the wont rte end it oe season have Baker and Col-| believe pretense, never making false claims a big saving of dollars on the best clothes ome the Seattle players ine been hauled up? &: d misrepresentation ag 2 ; ‘ have little to say about the | | follows a © re ; eo ae “tapepe | et ; & Bhat: Week made in America; for the ladies, a beautiful Northwestern league pennant Baker, three games, batting | f Bw noey ten code pea ert suit pattern free. So come, and we will join hunt this summer, but they can average 539; Collins, .583 | t rom 4 the — o ait around the cracker barrels In 25 trips to the plate the United States and Canada—it us COME hands and make merry together. Be here to- and talk by the hour about || have harvested a fleck on ss hosts of good, loyal friends. ha I morrow—the biggest day of all—sure. An jock of ? gE what the All-Stars did to the hits, for a combined average of | Beavers 560. They have scored | . . e ° runs, driven in over t It | erate ad helt ae ere is tangible evidence ot our heartteit apprecia- | runs as the entire Giant lineup An Eastern paper tell Tommy | has been able to gather in all Gavigan, the boxer, has a chance to meet the champion of France. How exciting! Oct. 10 won from (¢ NEW YORK, Gunboat Smith, of California, Morris, Ok arl the inreday night, the latter second, Smith had led round. Morris outw 54 pounds and was very clumsy and awkward j | cuss EN UP SERIES | | CHICAGO, Oct. 10.—By_ taking Thursday's game from the Sox, the | Cubs evened up the elty champion ls ing it oneall. The Save for the in p series, 6 Cubs won 6 to 56. The game went 13 Innings Nationals ane ¢ 9 3 Americ . 369 Bat v n and Archer Cieotte, Benz and Schalk MILLER MAY NOT COME BACK | rge Mil score card bant and announcer at the ball| park, and his partner, Paul Brown ing, left Seattle Thursday for the South. They will winter in Call fornia, Before leaving, Miller sald he doubted whether he would be/ back again next season. r, the CAN BE CURED AT SMALL COST UNDER THE MACY SYSTEM you TREATS 1 f wo CURES ALL Chronic Diseases * t 4 . i . r uralys | PAYS SPEC all day. Store will manently with Diseases of Women—Irregy | Periods, Displace and weaknesses peculiar fo the | ‘out resort to surgery. | Diseases of Men Dim sand o weakneses at moders Nervous Del Special * MY COMBINATION TREATMENT ror | IMPAIRED VITALITY NEVER PAILS al and Surgical Kpeqat 22-24 CLOBE BLDG. ‘Madison St. and First Av., Beattie, Wash. On account of our Holiday we will be closed 6 o’clock tomorrow. 615-619 FIRST AVENUE On the Square Opposite the Totem Pole The Big Store With the Little Rent cliff Bi catcher enship, the former Se d this season man at acer of the Miss Mont., team the Union ¢ ation ! generally giv # hav 4 Walter Johnson, app missed narrowly r in this fel across another “find ow Joe Bush, the young Philadelphian who humiliated the Giants Thurs day Bush graduated to the big leagues from Missoula a year ago, | a short time before Blankenship took over the manngership of the | elub. NATIONALS WIN OPENER ST. LOUIS, Oct. 10—The open-| ing game of the series to determine the championship of this city be tween the National and American league clubs was won by the Na tlonals 1 to 0 Thursday VAISE GOES TO FRISCO Frenchie Vaise, the lghtweight champion of Canada, and his new| manager, O'Connor, left Seattle to- day for San Francisco, where the Renton lad will make his debut in California fistic circles. be open at this newspaper by George M 1 GUESS HE ISN'T A BIRD, WHAT? OH, NO By Grantland Rice. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 10— By this time you may have in- halel the hazy Inference of what | mean by “dynamite in Mack's batting order,” meaning Eddie Collins and Franklin Bak er. The wonderful work of Math- ewson might curb them on one brief afternoon, but the largely stupendous bulk of thelr bat- ting eye caused ue several week ago to pronounce the Mackmen “the most dangerous ball club that ever waded Into a short series.” You can t ake your Ansons, Purk Delet os and co nwntve ng flosh {nto one lump and then know at the finish that the games never produced such a showy batting pair as Mack's two amazing rs of the glazed and tempered Plenty of Proof This may stand as a broad asser tlon, but to t who rise and say we ‘are wrong, we hereby fire a broadside of succulent statictics to show exactly where we stand We are raling in opinions. but with amy and id pr arrayed in a cluster of facts Frank Baker now is in his third | world’s series. He has faced the best pitching the Cubs and Giants had to offer pennant winning pitching consid ered above par. In these three years, out of 59 three games. Outside of this they have been stopped, check- ed, curbed and dispersed. Also choked and throttled. To say nothing of halted and subdued. Mathewson alone stopped him be. cause his wall of physical stuff also carried a master brain. Marquard fell and Tesreau was slaughtored, not either was shy of the stuf cause they were unable to out Mackn Here you. have ging club and curves, set with a toe-hold Tesreau never looked to have greater speed, his curves cracked sharply, and he falled to issue a pass. because but t aw once gets speed if it Ford Picked Bush Synday morning at the Pennsyl vanfa station I bumped into Ruse Ford, as the Yankeo slabman was waiting to board an outbound ves tibule for his Minnesota home Which youngster will Mack nse?” we queried, “Bush, Brown or Hush, almost to a certainty, sald Ford. young phers in baseball. He has stuff, eed and control, but jabove all, he f# a cool kid and a game one, and the sort that will | work as easily and as well in a big series as In an exhibition game | When he works the Giants will | they can carry. «ht a bigger earful there knew about at the time. | THURSDAY’S SCORE r Jelphin ABR MPO. A. EF ¢ 6 i a Rab ee 4-58 Mel ‘ $6 8 Strun Mars ae ie ee a Barry eae Tae ey ae tee | Bohang ek ok: ee Cw WOM, Pies e UH 1 00 € Totals 8) ie Se ah 2 New York AB. RK. H. PO. A. B no, 0b ee ae | Doyle, 2b ct. 4 | Fletcher, ae ,§ 5 Burns, It oe oe | Shafer, of ... So 6 Murray, rf 4 8 M ° 8 4 } ae ay} ee WY 6 2 0 0 0 0 oan In fifth Lost articles are usually found by Star want ads in the “Lost and Found” column, tHe 18 one of the great | YIPPING AND WHEEING IT THROUGH WORLD’S SERIES WITH GEO. -M. COHAN, WORLD’S GREATEST BASEBALL FAN| Cohan, the noted comedian—Copyright, 1913, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association, PRETTY SOFT! JUST LIKE THAT'S PUTTING THE WOOD WOW! I GUESS THAT KID'S DON'T MAKE ME LAUGH; MY FEATHERS ON A DUCK TO IT, KID KIND OF ROTTEN! ___HEAD ACHES. ‘SAILORS WILL GIVE _A meeting of the eattle pub coe DOBIE HARD TUSSLE Commerce wa , chambe for « € et Ford hed oimed ths tuts A Hhal eens a & very seldom that st in cabelas ule woek Por whisper . k , en shifted to half ia quet to be net ers pave a - Tho day before yerterday we saw) | ee ee eee crew whe arte ae iller’s stead. If the Varsity Plank, aged 89 years, shut out the a ae he to walk off into the lead Giants for nine innings before he ; ele ret in & game are sailors, Dobie is plane broke ter than ever aspirants @ | v ‘oach 4 th D Yonterday we looked upon one! | contnunr nnd po — downcast ove he p 20 years younger than the reat on cept 4 pe the ract € tw i - southpaw but = ‘ential Fe srday | | tributed to the to def: Bremertor All id Tooth Filler, math an if he might have started pitch-| | '* expenses ast wi , , the Saturday afternoor ic. Butler Drug Co., Seattle, ry we erties ball r 0 guests o yonor at the feed m’t take a wa ping by ater “ong born nig aly agian The only oarsmen who will | | ¢y roa't heart. It has no bear-|— a ee be unable to take part in the | |, coker ; wt as cool as Plank—almost ! ng on the champtonst is the Ady and what’ more, he heg || vanquet are George Hutto Sal Satamion of the compas. this at Dreamland 4 roht t YOUTH, stool wired, supple and | | 894 Archio ho have a te am | . ls ta attending Y Pe of former Annap-| TONIGHT work and grew! | Campbell bas entered Prince. | |¢ © played two games| : 9 war progressed 4 ton, thu “ r < vo| Admission 10c pading 2 Dance Wagnor’s Orchestra, his game, § THE WORLD'S STORES LARGEST FROM COAST TAILORS WE ARE GOING TO ANNIVERSARY AND TO COAST 22nd CONVERT OUR FALL OPENING INTO A Friendship Event Come Shake Hands and Enter Into the of the loyalty and patronage of our good friends $25 to $30 tion SUITS AND OVERCOATS | " by the most skilled tailors in ne 1 yrs latest shades of browns, grays, epherd pla Penc trip English worsteds, ete. Over- coats are in t jest Overcoat materials of the season. Regular $25 and $30 value but ; Made S to Your Measure For Only . Some Special Character Fabric at $18.00 and $20.00 WE WANT THE LADIES TO COME, TOO | | ) . . . | We Want Your Continuous Friendship and Good Will Choice of Hundred Styles A LADIES’ SUIT ABSOLUTELY FREE! ———— e to all customers tntering our store during our great Friendship Event, who purchase either a suit or overcoat. This is a rare opjortunity to secure a beautiful suit pattern absolutely free, and it will be exclusive and smart. If for any reason you just can't come, tell your husband or sweetheart not to forget your suit pattern. But don't you fail tocome, for we want to shake your hand and get better acquainted. We will look for you. A PERSONAL NATIONAL TAILORING INSTITUTION 794 First Av TWO STORES Third Av. at Spring YOU SAVE ALL MIDDLE MEN’S PROFITS FROM MAKER DIRECT TO YOU ——

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