The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 12, 1914, Page 7

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RACE HORSES ACT GREAT DEAL LIKE BALL PLAYERS; THE | NAGS HIT SLUMPS | fer $7,500. | the last. In the next heat he 1 ‘Cross Is Winner in Great Battle Aug. 12.—Hav-|Jority of the rounds, but Croas land Hing reversed the verdict of a pre-jed far cleaner and more effective Pvious meeting, Leach Cross {s/ blows and took less punishment alled today as the pusilistic mas-| than the Mexican “ter of Joe Rivers. | Neither man was knocked down, Cross outpotnted Rivers in a 20-| Rivers started well, outboxing ound bout at McCarey’s Vernon | Cro during the first few rounds rena last night, winning decisively | and appearing fast and strong LO8 ANGELES, jover, had transferred the balance he his favor. Thereafter he was never headed. th trim and both battled I! Rivers was the aggresso! ‘@ Hold Water Meet | athletic committee of the Se-| atile “Athletic clud ts flooded with | entries for the annual water car) nival to be held off Blakistone tela} Baturday afternoon. | ‘Butler Is Winner ‘The two dlondies, “Blondy” But-| men, every man at ) Jer and “Bondy” Hoftman, tangled | How serious their faces a at the White House partons, in =| youthful high spirits or marti Butler by a poole ay td : | sions rather betoken deep thor 8 1s FIRST NEW TORK Aug. 12—The Davis cup matches opened here ‘Thursday with R. Norris Williams playing An- thony F. Wilding of Anstraita. EQUAL KALAMAZOO, Mich. Aug. 12.— ‘The nd circuit races opened here ee Anna Bradford, pacer, equaled the world's mile record. ‘Time, 2:05%. DUGDALE FIELD ‘BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 BALLARD V8. SEATTLE Admission 25c, 50c, 75c and T Fourth Ave. Cars (Continued “The war that in the end |heard and we read in the pape that is a law of Nature. Ti }bread from one another’s mou other of the air to breathe. “ end can only be settled by Fore We are mercenaries no lor der, who once sold their bloo« sundry. of dying as an exciting specta the rich, and for the lust of th It is to our native land we And if it must be, we are die in the full consciousness a acts. What will the next few da seen a field of battle But others, and we have read _in_be tle-field looked like in 1870-71, eyes, we have watched the sh ONVENIENCE and SERVICE ‘Are three big reasons why the FOUR ALL-STEEL TRAINS Operated Daily To Portland Via the And another thing known of inferior guns and rifles, ove seen. more than a long-drawn affair against one another; I seem to Then are we a breed of men/ other than our fathers? | Ie the reason because we only have one life to lose? And do we cling 40 passionately to this life?! than this scrap of life? There probably won't be many among us who believe in the Res- urrection, who believe that our) mangled bodies will rise again tn new splendor, | Nor do we believe that our Father im Heaven will have pleasure in our murderous doings, |that in that better world He will jregard us other than as our | brothers’ murderers. But we bent our heads iron Necessity. The fatherland has called us, and) we, as loyal sons, obey the com- mand there is no evading, submis- sively. . . . From today on- ward we belong to our native land, so the major shouted a minute ago as he read out the articles of war. And it’s going to be the real ‘Are increasingly popular with ' the traveling public. Steel Flyer Leaves Seattle 7:30 p. m. Arrives Portland 2 p. m Limited Leaves Seattle 9:30 a. m. Arrives Portland 3:30 p. m. Puget Sound Leaves Seattle 11:30 a. m. | Arrives Portland 6:15 p. m. Owl before | Leaves Seattle 11:15 p. m. jing thle me 2 | © Arrives Portland 6:45 a. m.| The rergeant-major has already i Arrives Hoquiam 7:15 a. m.|read the roll and choke it. We i re :30 | are already told off in fours. Now, Gleeping care tracy st 2 lin a long column, we are marching across the barrack-yard, for this very day we are ordered to doff } _*£- m.) | For lars, reservations his place by the table We are gladiators no longer Not one of us has probal we have heard It’s customary for a minor league player who hae been going great guns to hit a slump as soon as his sale to a big league teand is an- nounced, and last week in Cleveland, Tom Patch, a trotter, showed that star horses also cary act the same way. a 2:14 event, in which Tom Patch was second, the owner sold the horee d sixth and dropped to eighth In fint Right after the firet heat in STAR—WEDNESDAY, A PORT UGUST 12, 1914, PAGE 7. pas to o Although tha averages show in black and white that Ty Cobb Is the most dangerous pinch hitter, there’s a reason why Cobb is not 8am Crawford follows Cobb and alk Tyrus would be putting just one more man on the bases to be wed by the pitcher In the pinch. ed in by & Crawford has been been in the majors 15 years and during his career has hit better than 300 for 12 seasons BRAVES WIN BECAUSE JAMES WORKS EVERY 3RD DAY G EORGE STALLINGS, Boston National, has overturned another tradition In baseball. pennants were wor in the best days of baseball and is winning on that theory. He has rev ‘erted to the old Idea on which Almost every manager in baseball hae the Idea that If he can get four pitchers Into condition to work In rotation, with a fifth ready to act ae reliever and ready to cut in and pitch one-ha on on the theory that he could win if he Stallings was working desperately to crea Stallings worked thi did not have eight well-pitched games. He got Bill James, Tyler and Rudolph Into condition, with Crutcher, 5 + a strong, mediocre young pitcher, for the reliever. It Ie doubtful whether any trio of pitchers ever has carried so hot @ pace so far In modern aseball. They have been In there every third day, pitching marvelous ba be back on the slab. t three pitche a pitching Into shape to aff, nd they know when they fini of a double-header, he can win, work every third day. Out of the firat 55 games of the year he sh a game just when they will PLAYERS IN FIGHT one of the best matches seen| Thoroughly warmed up, however,! xyw YORK, Aug, 12.—Henry tn the last year. : “bv ce Aggie It the batcle| Zimmerman and Roger Rresnahan, Both men were In excellent [ly lead and, with f the battle) Gun players, may draw susy following thelr fist fight on th yesterday From Page 1) re. They reveal. no trace of al exuberance, Their expres- ught “The War That Was Bound to Come” was bound to come”——so we rs. “That is bound to be so, ne nations are snatching the ths; they are depriving each That is a thing which in the e. And if it has tobe, better it should be today than tomorrow iger—those hirelings for mur- { for money down to all and slaves who enact the drama acle for the entertainment of heir eyes. took our oath resolved to die as citizens, to nd full responsibility for our ys have in store for us? bly ever, with his own cyes, about it from oks of other men what a bat- and, as though with our own ells shattering human bodies. 120,000 Stay Behind on Field is that 40 years ago, in spite ra hundred and twenty thou- sand dead stayed behind on the field of honor. What percentage of living will modern warfare claim? Armies are being marshaled faster than the world has ever Germany alone can put six million soldiers in the field; France as many. Then the war of '70-'71 was nothing of outposts! My brain reels when I try to visualize these masses—starting to march choke for breath. reloading. And yet the war accounted for well over 100,000 French and Ger- man dead. I wonder how many dead this Isn’t our native land worth more/| war will account for? If only every} fifth man is left on the field, and if another fifth comes home in- valided . . . what will its har vest amount to then? eee Curse! I cannot get rid of this hideous thought It {s always cropping up again. We have passed on from retafl to wholesale methods of business. In place of the loom at which you sat working with your own hands, they have now set the great power looms in motion. Once tt was a knightly death, an honorable soldier's death; now it {s death by machinery. That is what is sticking in my gullet. We are being hustled from life to death by experta—-by mecha nictans. And just as they turn out but tons and pins by wholeeale meth- ods of production, so they are now turning out the crippled and the dead by machinery. Why do I, all of a sudden, begin to shudder? I feel as if it had eud- denly become clear as daylight that this {s madness—blood-red mad- and tickets call on |. H. O’NEILL, D. P. A. 16 2nd Ave. Main 932. If you are a sufferer from asthma in any form, it will pay you to investigate. I have cured asthma of 30 years’ standing, not in Boston and New York, but here in Seattle and towns around Seattle, and I have not fafled in one of them. Now, if you are a suf- terer from this 4 e and can’t sleep nights, I will give relief at once and a cure in time. The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth- ma, Bronchitis, Catarrh in all its forms, such as Tonellitis, Adenoids, Gastric Ulcer of the Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh of the Bladder, Prostatitis in men, all Bowel Diseases in women; Rheumatism of all forms; all Nervous Diseases, , Heart and Eezema, y others too numer ous to mention. If you are in doubt, write apd I will give you names and addresses of i people I have cured. Olympic View Sanitarium, 14.16 W. Harrison OR. G. J. NUERNBERG ‘Phone Queen Anne 3127 our civilian dress, and don our new kit. This very day we have got to become soldiers. | Things are moving apace with | us now. On the afternoon of the follow-| ing day, the company {1s detailed) for barrack drill. We are lying on our stomachs tn the barrack yard and are being drilled in taking aim and firing lying down. | I have just been sighting. In front of me on the barrack | wall over there they have painted |targets. Ring targets, head tar- chest targets. Three hundred “Square in the chest.” That ¥ 6. Wonder how many clips of car- tridges am I going to get through? Wonder if there will be a bull's leye among them? If every man of those millions they are putting into the field against the enemy fires about 100 cartridges, and there ts.one bull's: leye in every 100, that works out at . . . that amounts to. . ,| andé I can’t help smiling at this {neat sum in arithmetic . then te answer is no one at all. | That is a merry eum. | ee ness lowering for us there, ee Curse! I must not go on brood.) ing over ft any longer, or tt will) drive me mad. | Your rifle at the ready! The enemy is facing you! | Has that ceased to be a case of) man to man? What does !t matter even # the bullet finds {ts billet more surely? Aim steadily—straight for the chest. Who is ft really facing me? The man I am now go ing to shoot dead! An enemy? What is an enemy? (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) COBB SIGNS CONTRACT DETROIT, Aug. 12.—Ty Cobb has signed a three-year contract with Detroit, calling for his present sal- ary, $15,000 a year A Visit Will Tell. Call Today | Snickt | ‘The fifth cartridge tumbles out. I ram in another clip of dummy cartridges. How quickly and smoothly that's done, One—two seconds, and five leartridges are set in your maga | zine. Every one of them, if need be, |can penetrate six men; it can pene \trate palisades and trees; it can ipenetrate earthworks and stone wall ‘There is practically no cover left agginst this dainty little missile, against this little pointed cone, | And what a wonderful bit of | mechanism this Mauser rifle is. How wretchedly badly off they were in 1870-71 with thetr rattle ltrap needle guns. A single feeble bullet at a time, and after you had fired it c me the long, complicated business of Are Entirely Private. = FREE my practios to chronic of men and fo aliments ani 1 contin’ and nervous disease women, such as oh of thi LIVER, STOMACH, BOWELS, KIDNEYS, BLADDER, SKIN, BLOOD, PILES, VARI COW VEINS, ULOMRS, TC. DR. DONAWAY i ” amrsee = ee Crowds gathered near the Alsace-Lorraine monument in Paris, watching for newspaper extr: moves of the German emperor after the kaiser’s deciaration of war on Rpeeias RS ee By Mary Boyle O'Reilly (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterpri Association.) LONDON, Aug. 12-—When | went to Southwestern Europe last year to report the famous ritual case for The Star, | passed through Servia, at Bel- grade, | made friends with Servian journalist, who se me the following remarka Interview with Crown Prince Alexander of Servia. His people call the young crown prince “Alexander of Macedon” be cause they think his victories in Macedonia over the Turks during the recent war in the Balkans earned him the right to be com- pared with the great Greek com- mander who sighed for “now worlds to conquer.” How He Looks and Acts IAke the greater Alexander, the Servian prince is small of stature, but judged by his sturdy hand- shake his physical energy is catra- ordinary. His large brown eyes peer shrewdly through glasses that seem worn more to veil his thoughts and emotions than be cause he has physical need of them. BROWN’S Optical Department CUT RATES Dr, ©. 'T. Knowlton in Charge. BEST IN THE WORLD Do you see this double vis- fon — invisible lens? It ina perfect lens for Aistant as well as reading or near vision These lenses usually sell for from $16 to $20, but until Oct. ist T will sell them for $10. My Optical N 1 Davertmen oe ~~ licates lenses pitcates scam. INVISIBLE Double Vision oar, ‘$3; BEST IN THE quirements of the case, It ta WORLD to your advan- tage to consult this Optometrist) about your « he preseribes, | grinds and fits 1 lenses, 1 will! fave you money and guarantee sat-| iwfaction. DK. EDWIN J. HROWN, Main 3040 Ruler of Servia Says Peace Can Be Obtained Only Through Fighting tical Department, 705 Firat Ave. ‘sahington Bldg. Offices 101 to 120, Confidently, Alexander, crown prince of Servia, talked to me of Prince Alexander of Servia his plans and hopes a fow days after the Austrian invasion of Ser- via applied the match which has set Burope flaming in the greatest war in the history of the world, First, the crown prince tells why | \ this war is necessary. In his words: “This war was necessary that later wo may have an assured peace in which to develop the in- ternal resources of our country, For years we have been surrounded Scenic Cafe FIRST AND STEWART f —____] A Place to Eat by neighbors far from friendly and I have labored to prepare Servia for the attack now made upon her by our greatest enemy. “Our army is well organized. Our artillery is entirely French, there- fore marvellously effective. It will soon show {ts incomparable super fority to that of our euemies, which is wholly German. “Russia and France have come to our ald tn this great crisis,” the }young prince continued. “My father, King Peter, fought tn the ranks of the French army in 1870 | against the Prussians and for his |bravery in battle was decorated | With the Cross of the Legion of Honor. Today France will pay her debt of gratitude a thousandfold.” “The world expects great things of you, her military {dol,” I ven- tured to remark to his royal high- ness, “It has heard of your vio tories and of your great personal courage in the Balkan war.” “if | have courage It Is the ind | am thankful im thankful, too, that | command my b Ser vian soldiers, unsurpassed In the world for courage and en- durance. Another cause | have for thankfulness In the midet of our great peril, Is that the cost of war will not Complete Report of Market Today Prices Paid Producors for Vegeti Senet Vearetee end (Corrected Aatly by J. W. New potatoes ... ‘ Cal, sweet potatoes, Th ., Onions Godwin & Co.) Jemons, crate Cal, lemons, crate Cantaloupes Loganberri Raspberries Te O14 roosters, live . Hens, over 3 Ibm. os. .seee Hons, § Ibs, and under ., Ducks sone hquabs, Guinea fowl, Iv O14 pigeons, Foo; PiGorrected dally by (Correcte Esse Magee verce sree ens rr) Native Washington brick .. rT) Nave Washington ‘creamery, solid pack .. oy ‘heese Wisconsin triplet RY) astern brick ..... eT) | Russell was (——— ie aie PITCHERS DO NOT | WALK TYRUS COBB WHEN IN TROUBLE; | THERE'S A REASON playing ball 17 years. He has Veteran Tennis Champ Bumped The defeat of Veteran Samuel Russell, singles champion of the state of Washington, and regarded as Seattle's foremost wielder of the |— racque featured yesterday's | matches in the second day of the annual Washington championships vanquished by Hugh Kelleher, a mere youth, who was runner-up {n last year’s tourney. Russell's defeat left no room for argument as to the question of su periority between the two players. Russell forced Kelleher to a 6-4 set at the opening, but failed to register a single game in the following set, which his young opponent took, €-0. The gallery was due for another shock. Teal Williams, former Seat Ue interscholastic champion, lost to Johns, 6-2, 10-8, Johns is one of the California contingent. Play was resumed today. Reattio — ABR HPO. A PB Kilitiay, ef . ' 1 1 1 e . Raymond, «= ' e ° i : 1 Swain, if He ae CS a as ab 1 1 1 ° 1 ' ° o 1 ’ ° 400 6 4 Oo 1 ° e 1 ° J 9.058) Se 2 ° ° ‘ J o a6 1 6 8 of 1 ° o e ° + sree ' 8 24 is 2) *Patted for Bonner tn ninth. | Ball — ABR HPO. A FE) “* 2 2 2 4 o 1 a 1 o 6 ° 1 ° ° ® ae Sak Ee a e ° 1 o ° ° ° ‘ a ° 1 1 ° ‘ 1 1 1% 6 ° ° ° 4 ° e ° 1 ° 4 e ° © ° e ° Totals ......99 8 1 37 2 Score sist Ballard ... se LOL12100 Beattie . ooooo8 our own Threebase hite—Bonner, Milligan. base hite—Killilay, MoKane, Coltrin 2. Btolen bases-Coltrin, Melchotr. Double piay—-Pallard 1. Left on bases—Rallard Beattlo 9 Pitchers’ recorde—0 bite, @ runs off Callahan tn 1 inning. Struck out—Bonner 1, Peterson 3, Callahan 1. Bases on balis—Bonner §, Peterson 4, Calishan 1. Umpire—Burnstdes. PIES WE MAKE our own SOUPS WE SERVE | KITTITAS BAKED POTATOES N OTHER LEAGUES AMERICAN chicago 2-2, jeveland NATIONAL—Boston ¢, Cincinnati 6 (18 innings); Brooklyn % Chicago 2; Philadelphia 6, Pittsburg 4; Bt. Lous 8, New York 2 4, Pittsburg 2; Brooklyn 2-8, Chicago 0-6, NORTH! Ballard 6, Seattle 8 8, Bpokane 1; Vancouver ¢, 3; Tacom: oria COAST—Loe Angeles 1, Venice 0; Oak- on Jand 1, fan ; Portiand ramento 3. * * Dining Cars that are a Criterion for others VISIT | INDUSTRIAL FAIR az ARMORY. Au Weex, Aucust 17722, NOON 0 EVENINGS * C Arrractive ano Interesting EXHieiT OF RDEATTLE PR Goop Music Dany [DoNotSend My Patients Away toDie THEY GET WELL RIGHT HERE — Read the testimonial. It’s but one of many that prove my Glandular Remedies a cure for tuberculosis. Seattle, August 27, 1913. Three years ago I was ordered South by two prominent physicians, who upon examination pro- nounced my case tuberculosis of the lungs. I went South and improved some, but about seven months ago I got very bad again—coughed incessantly, had night sweats and got down in bed and could not get up. I was completely exhausted. Dr. Jordan was recommended to me as a specialist in tubercu- Wer Under his treatment I saw improvement at oncé and have now entirely recovered and am at work right along. (Signed) G, A. HACKETT, 163 Fifteenth Ave. There being a number of Doctors Jordan in Seattle, it is well to bear in mind the full name and address of Doctor J. Eugene Jordan, 619% First Avenue, Seattle. Office hours, 9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays from 2 p. m. to6 p.m. Consultation free. Correspondence solicited. Watch each Wednesday Star for remarkable cures. ANUEACTURERS* MERCHANTS eimwee weet errr

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