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NAP LAJOIE SAYS HE ISN'T LAYING DOWN ON THE NAPS; HE ALWAYS TRIED Lajole, | | Ingham of the Naps and him id and played ae well Local Fans Want to See Bill James } Enter Big Series Dozens of telephone inquiries! bugs are viewing the Braves’ great dash on to Pennant ville, and the tm: portant role which Bill James, two is taking | | every afternoon at The Star office from fans seeking the result of the Boston National game, exemplifies the Interest with which Seattle years ago with Seattle, in the combat, Northwestern fa have visions of James taking t leading role in the world’s seri this year, allowing that the Bra flag. Yesterday patched big Bill to No Speed There The date of the opening of the Manager Stallings 4 the on the course, has caused the daca Middies Sign Up short end of a 7 to 3 score. have been signed by George and Billy Murray for a 20- bout, to be fought here Ad- day, September 9. Chip Murray out in the 15th! round on a previous occasion. wa, [by the Indians, 6 to 2. SCORES AND STANDIN ’ before his day. never lald down In a baseball game. nt to go to another team or nét. beat the Giants out for the National mound, Six) hits were divided among the team Tesreau was unable to check the onrush of the Braves and retired to let Demaree repulse the enemy Later Wiltse relieved Demaree. * E: Boston hammered the trio for 11 N FRANCISCO, Aug. 15.—Ar- safe hits. self had caused him to lay down, | have always gone out on could. | don't know whether | would RALPH FRARY NOW BARKEEP INVANCOUVER \IFTY bones a week and F found for two hours’ work each day, or 26 plunke per week for about 10 hours’ work a day and pay your own expenses. Which job would you prefer to hold down? All depends on the class of work says the wise guy. Ralph Frary, who umpired in Northwestern league and then Jumped out of the harness for reasons the sporting public were rised of, hi pplied for in Vancouver, B. C., to pilot echooners and mix highbalis In one of the local bars. q Frary, at the time of his eud- |] den disappearance, was said to ne ry of || have jumped to the Federals. unicipal golf links, situated on) where he opposed Tesreau, one jeacon hill, has been deferred until the stars of the New York Giant || The Fede dented it. the fall, according to Director of hurling staff. James mowed down eee Seay 806 Ratered Playgrounds Stine. The refusal of the Giants in rapid fashion with jondere’ league. the health department to hasten the his terrific speed and dazzling, Temoval of the pest house, now lo-| twisters, and New York fell to the At 2 o'clock today the first event in the annual water carnival staged by the Seattle Athletic club off | Blakistone—the canoe races—was |echeduled to begin. A big crowd Harry Rush, the little pitcher who | turned out. favorite in Seattle several) ars ago, tolled on the mound for ‘acoma yesterday and was bumped Spokan registered five hits, of which two! | were doubtful. Rush had been pitch-| of two brothers playing outfield po- ing semi!-pro ball around Spokane sitions, provided it obtains Joe Wil- reappearance yester-|hoit from Venice. 2 Wilhoits Now Victoria will offer the attraction He {ts a brother ‘of the Bees’ present leftfielder. From Page 1.) essed tight against his abdomen, In the country I was once watching them killing sheep. There a beast lay, and was waiting for the butcher, and as the short knife cut through its windpipe and jugular vein, and the blood leaped hot from its neck, I could see nothing but the big eye, how it enlarged in its head to a fearsome to a dull glass All the bodies lying about here, as if bleating up to RW PO AE . . ‘ e e oe tes as ae ’ e e : . ° ea ae ak ae a he a ae ae ‘ ° : 2 1 o oa 68 3 9 : a e 1 e e o 1 e ‘ e ~@t e ° . e ° ee ee ee (Continued 0 4 ot te . . etehtn. back is holding his hand pr Jem HPO A Blas if he were trying to staunch the wound Steet t & 6 ee # © +4 ° ° ‘ 1 4 is gn or Gan faa aM | o ° 2 e el : 1 1 . e 1 ? ” e ? 1 e ae2191 06 e ° . 1 1 ° ee oO 1 . 1 e 2S tS § Si stare, until at last it turned 2 ¢nmw ? tee! heaven, have got these glazed eyes, they are lyin; as if Well, to be hit and tase hine| they were bay joo in the abattoir. , James, McKune, Lewis | to fall down dead, there’s nothing to make a fuss about that! “iere—ecattie 1 Balara's teti| But to be shot through the chest, to be shot through the en basce—Seattic §. Ballard ¢ and ¢ rune off Kelly in 1 rack out—Calahan §. Dell f Bases on dballe—Dell 2 Defeat to Dell ° IN OTHER LEAGUE! oo is ‘AN—Wasbington 2, Philadel phia 1; New York 7, Boston ¢; Chicago 6 accursed eyes go on refusin I turn away from them. 4 belly, to burn for hours in the fever of your wounds, to cool your mangled body in the pitiless blue heavens because your g to glaze over yet— I force myself to look past these mocking, grotesque posed plastiques of Death. And I am already spirited far away, and am sitting in NATIONAL Boston f New vork 3 my little study at home. My coffee cup is standing snugly oo 7 ee. Philadelphia #./to my hand. My book-case is beaming down on me. M FEDERAL—Pittsture 5, Chicago 8:| well-loved books invite me, and in front of me my boo we 5; Brookiye §! 4f books, “Faust,” lies open. And so I read, and feel the Nard 2, Seatt : Spokane ce 6-2, Los Angeles 1-4: cramento 7; Onkiand 3, WESTERN — Bal ae 2; Vancouver 11, Victoria 1 C3 : Tacoma * my longing blood. The door opens. learned the use of bi their noses In at the door. I out their little arms, and rush me. “Daddy!” is how we ride to war.” round my neck until at length put them down on the floor go to mummy—" And now— Then I come back with a start I feel my knaj —I feel my rifle—tI see the de my feet again— so terribly close to each other? ee spring crop of dead bodies. lone says a word. No one has pet. Joke. How surreptitiously seijothers glance aside when one $a4| meets their eyes. Paid Producers Prices I's! =, A little gi legs, put) t They are climbing on my knees now, and I give them a ride—"this But they twine their soft arms “Now ick chafing my back My God! how can these things | and I feel be? How can these two worlds be their shy eyes as if all that is go And we pass on through this first | No] the | cozened some | bodies. corpse, all too grotesquely mangled, | 1 wonder what is passing through Complete Report of Market Today Vegetables and wonderful relaxation that comes after work stealing through irl, and a boy who has just eir brains? Working men, tradesmen, tisa: and agricultural hat's what they are for the most ar- at) part. They themselves have as yet never smelied powder, nor ever | been under fire. That, I suppose, is the reason | why they haye suddenly become so dumb. I} Then a voice beside me says something abruptly, and it seems as if the voice rebounded hollow from the silence. “The stuff is laying about here same as muck.” That was my yoke! beside me. Then he, too, relapses Into silence {f I could read behind ing on in these dull brains had eud- \denly become clear as daylight. eee They're all drawn from that other al|world. where Life kissed us and caressingly round our You have brought us up as hu man beings That we have been human no longer counts. Life and love no longer count; flesh and blood no longer count; only gore and corpses count for anything now. How we used to tremble in that other world, when a naked human life was even in danger. How we rushed Into the burning house to drive away the death for | which some poor old paralyzed wo- wrecged Gally by J. W. bart a Co.) | man ayaa . * 4.2 %1%| How we plunged into the wintry ie god 3 3 ar a eb tbh +. 02%@ 03 lriver to snatch a starved sition declared the fair's opening | [%\,, Lwill not be postponed owing to the Yuropean war, Corn, per Local radishes .. Caulifiower, per Local celery house tom! | Watermetons, per Ib. | Honey, new, case Honey, strained - | Valencia oranges Who, Through Errore or Ex cesses, are victims of Insom- ria, Despondency, Nervous Debility, indigestion, Coneti- pation, Loss of Energy and Ambition, Mental and Phys- jcal Wrecks, should renew their youth by using Dr. Pierce’s Tablets By mall, $1 per box, or 6 boxes for $5. Every box guar- anteed. Money refunded if they fall. Not a Temporary Stimulant, but a Permanent Cure. Try it and you will not be disappointed. For by Kinsell Bros., Second and Madison and Third and Columbia. Address ail letters to Raymond Remedy Co. 217 Pike St., Seattle, Wash. be ming Gravenateins g Veet Ngooe bigek hows. - ted dally by (Correct Rass native creamery, sauve « creamery, triplets ‘Wisconsin C tier, Kass. of possessions—here beggar | brat from the quiet waters. We would not even suffer a man to creep away out of Life by stealth while we looked on. We cut down suicides at their last sob, and hustled them back into life. Of our mercy we set up half-rotted wastrels with new bodies; with pills, elixirs and medicines, with herbalists, professors and surgeons, with cauteries, amputations and electrotherapy, we fanned the flickering life and fed the sunken flame with oxygen and radium and all the elements. There was nothing greater, noth- ing more sacred than LA Life was everything to us, was for us the most precious possession on earth. And here lies that most precious it Is lying wasted and used up—spurned as the dust by the roadside—and we are marching along over it as over dust and stones. (To Be Continued Monday.) LAUNDRYMAN FINED Contessed violation of the elght- hour law for women employes yes- terday resulted in a $40 fine at Everett for R. G, Scott, proprietor of the Monroe Steam Laundry at Monroe, A STAR WANT AD will sell it quickly. Water Meets On; STAR-—SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1914. PAGE 7, “1! have alwaye played the game the best | know how,” says Larry in reply to charges that the bad blood between Manager Birm-| “| have the top, be been with Jackson, left far behind, Cobb and Jackson for the championship honors, and the fans have Last week his average was 356 American league fans are pulling for Joe Jackson to lead the bate- men of that ciroult at the end of the season. his present pace, all the off and if ha continu The it few ye. |MIKE GIBBONS CREDITS SELF-CONTROL FOR | By Kid Howard | Several years ago a chubby- |faced, brown-fisted little fellow was on his way home from work in |a tin shop fn Bt. Paul, Minn, The |Kang on the corner attacked him. The little knuckles, made tough from hard labor, crashed against jthe chin of the biggest boy fn the | crowd and he was stretched on the |sidewalk. Severai business men | who witnessed the affair said, “You did right, ‘sonny,’ and we'll go the |Mmit for you.” | That punch was the making of Mike Gibbons, one of the world’s |greatest boxers. For it was little Mike who delivered the blow from | his left hand that has made him | thousands of dollars and reputation jas a boxer the world over ke hates to talk about him- jself, but I learned from him that [he ts 26 years old, with a wife and two children, and in the six years that he has been boxing profession: ally he has made a fortune of | $75,000, | have two sons,” said “and if | can prevent it never pugilists, it's hard for any one to get to the top and there isn’t a more uee- less fellow in the world than a bum prizefighter. “If I hadn't been a success in {the last few years I'd hav uck at my trade, But I've made good with the help of Eddie Reddy, my ir, so I've no complaints to Gibbons was boxing Instructor of the St. Paul Y. M. C, A. before he ‘Cupid Smashes Her Perfectly Lovely Career Mra. H, 8. Drago LOS ANGELES, Cal, Ang. 14 Cupid has just smashed another ca- reer! Mrs. H. 8. Drago of New York City, here on her honeymoon, jand for whom a brilliant musical career had been predicted by Fred de Grace, musical composer, and author of “The Purple Robe,” sur. prised and disappointed the musical world by her wedding. Her husband lis the publisher of novelized plays in New York. Their romance grew out of Drago’s determination to novelize “The Purple Robe,” in which his | wife was then playing. For a wed- |ding present Mrs. Drago received 100 shares in a quicksilver mine of Nevada, HE GETS CHANCE Thomas W. Shackelford, accused of insanity, yesterday talked so con- vincingly at his hearing before Su- perior Judge Everett Smith that he was placed on probation for 30 days, during which time he will be under observation by the court, and will be required to report periodically, Thousands DOLLARS GIVEN AWAY FREE In medical services by the most pro- gressive Drug Store in the North- west, Have you received your share? Our doctor is a graduate of Huro- pean and American schools, and will examine, advise and prescribe for you absolutely free of charge. You pay only for what medicines are needed at regular prices, Thousands of people have taken advantage of this, 30 a, m, to 9:30 p. m. Ladies and children, 2 p. m. to 9 p, m. 117 Yesier Way, Between First Av. and Occidental Av. Office hours, | Brendel Drug Co. began fighting. Many times Mike had to take a stiff punch on the jaw from eome green youngster, or | a bang in the nose that would ] | | (Copyright, 1914, by the He giptael Enterprise Association) | When I returned to Eliene’s| home this morning the housekeep. er told me Madame Symone, Har-) ry's mother, had called. \ 1 called her up as soon as pos) sible and she asked me in a less | arrogant tone than I had ever heard her use: “Mrs. Waverly, | will you be able to see me immedi- ately if I drive over?” “Certainly.” I was sure before she came that she had at last heard about the twins, but when she got here I found that a scape- grace brother of the girl who had died giving birth to Harry's twin bables had been trying to biack- mail her. “I want you to tell me the truth, Mrs, Waverly. Have those chil- dren any real claim on Harry?” Tam not worth much at bushing up things and, besides, I had a rather unholy desire to ruffie her high-bred calm. “They ha two-fold claim upon him, Mrs. Sy- mone. First, he is the father of jthem and, secondly, Eliene has done something few women would do under the circumstances—she |has legally adopted them.” Madame Symone's face blanched with horror and I really was a lit- tle sorry for telling ber the truth 80 baldly. “Do you mean to tell me that Eliene allowed to adopt those children?" “Mercy, you couldn't keep her from it when she knew the cireum- stances.” “Does she know what these peo- ple accuse Harry of in regard to these children?” “Certainly, and Harry admitted the acquisition was true.” Madame Symone was speechless and then she murmured to herself: “This, then, is the reason Harry ts in Burope and Eliene is giving up her home to strangers.” “Not quite strangers,” I | swered quietly, “You might call) us the friends who helped both | Harry and Eliene in suppressing a scandal that the wild act your son had committed had made.” | “But it isn’t suppressed,” wailed | Madame Symone, “That woman's | brother says he has some of Har-| ry’s letters and he wants me to buy them of him, Do you think he is |telling the truth? Do you think; that Harry would be so foolish as to write incriminating letters to a girl who was once my maid?” |in Winnipeg. THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE SCANDAL HAS A THOUSAND TONGUES “I can’t tell, but I would think ft were very likely, as Harry has done many more foolish and more sinful things than that.” “But what am Ito do? I am afraid to look in the evening yel- low papers for fear that I will see the disgrace of my family written there.” “1 think, perhaps, you had bet- ter let Dick attend to this.” “Will you tell him about it?” she asked, trembling, and I saw that her face had grown suddenly gray and old “1 will the moment he comes home, and I am sure he will call upon you tomorrow.” Here was another woman who TATE CAFE The Talk of the Town. Have you heard about it? The handsomest Cafe in America. Miss Viola Farrell \f heading a great show of 12 people. Monday, July 27 ADELINE FILDES. I. Johnson, Gen. Mgr. J. E. G. Wood, Amnt. Mgr. | HIS WONDERFUL ACHIEVEMENTS IN BOXING | GAME; ST.PAUL BOY HAS AMASSEDA FORTUNE make the t come. It would never do for an instructor to get angry and “wallop” one of his paying pupils. And all that time Mike unconsciously was practicin, a wonderful self. control that has stood him in £ at In 100 hard-fought tt “I was never mad in my life in fight but once,” said Gibbons, ‘and that was with Jimmy Clabby By letting my tem- per get the better of me I got a lovely Meking.” must suffer for participating in Harry Symone’s sins, 1 thought as I saw his mother’s bent form going jout the doorway. the girl who was the mother of Harry's enfldren, but also Ellene and Harry's mother were to blame with bim for this catastrophe. Harry's mother, by word and manner, taught her son that every woman who was below him tn fi- nacial and intellectual estate should be proud to accept anything Not only from his hands, and Eliene, instead ng eet as she is now, was always nagging Harry until he fled to the calmer, more complacent woman, and Eliene and Madame Symone must pay for their mis- takes almost as dearly as Harry and the girl have done for their sins. That is one of the tragedies of fe. We must always pay for mis- takes—and we make them nearly every waking hour. (To Be Continued Monday.) MILLIONAIRE OF KLONDIKE DEAD Harry C, Anderson went to the Klondike two years before the big gold strike. When he came out he was a wealthy man. He invested heavily in real estate here and in Stanwood, Skagit county. He became president of the Bank of Stanwood. Yesterday he died there. He ig said to have been worth $1,000,000 at the time of his death DUGDALE PARK BASEBALL Tomorrow 3 P. M. SEATTLE vs. BALLARD Prices, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1 TAKE FOURTH AV. CARS sap a cnesliielagl FANS ARE PULLING FOR JOE JACKSON | TO GRAB SWATTING | HONORS THIS YEAR Jackson Is right up at the slugge a fight betw Tennis Meet Is a Disappointment; Californians Win Washington state |ing all the year round in the sunny The annual tennis championship tournament | state in progress on the Seattle Tennis| Chamberlain, the Broadway club courts, closes this afternoon | high boy, who meets Taylor of Ta- with Van Dyke Jobns and H. C.\coma in the junior semi-finals, the Breck, both from California, clash-| winner playing the victor of the Breck and Gorves-Miller match for the title, ing for the singles title; Johns va. Russell and Fulton as proven the J men's doubles; Miss Sarah Living jor series, Those who have ston ve. Miss Myra Lambuth, wom atched Chamberlain pick bim to en's singles; Miss Livingston and|win the interscholastic title next Miss Archbald ve. Bragdon and | year. Miss Miller, and Miss Livingston | ” = and Kelleher vs. Mrs, Lyell and F Cardinall, mixed doubles |*“VWou BetWeWill’ While the tournament has been | one of the most successful in years | in the number of contestants, local| The South Park baseball team, s crack sem\-pro aggregation, has ac- cepted a challenge hurled by the Everett Nonpareils and a game be tween these two teams probably will be played at a future date. interest in the big event of the tournament—the men's singles championship—ceased two days ago when the Seattle contingent, to its last man, was forced out of ee the running. It 1s disappointing that two play-| h D ers from such a far-away point Change the Date should have to fight it out for the| highest honor in Washington state| ‘The Everett Tennis tournament tennis. Many tennis followers are hag been canceled, so the Seattle urging that hereafter the Washing-| athletic club has moved the date ton state tournament be restricted | of {ts national city tennis meet up to the players fn this state only. |to August 17, a week earlier than While Johns and Breck have! originally scheduled, shown little more in their general play than the stars of the local team, uh a8 lleher and Russell, their big advantage comes in pl LUMBER WORKER INSANE: SHOT AS HE TRIES TO KILL ELLENSBURG, Aug. 15.—-Shot by Arthur Jarred as he was about to send a bouble-bitted ax into the skull of Henry Weissenfluh, Willlam Smalley, 50, a lumber worker, is dead today. Smalley, while working in a lum- ber camp near South Cle-Elum, be- came suddenly insane, seized the ax and started in pursuit of Weis- senfluh. After a run of 100 yards he over- took the fleeing man, uplifted the ax and poised to strike, when a well- directed rifle bullet, fired by Jarred, killed him instantly, A coroner's jury Jarred. AUG. 22 1S HOME PRODUCT DAY August 22 is going to be some day here, folks. It's going to be the New Seattle Chamber of Commerce's state made- im-Washington day. The Chamber told Gov. Lister they wanted one, so he proclaimed the 22nd_ their It also looke as if the Sondef- kh yachts wouldn't race at Kiel this year. Dixie Land—Home of Prince Albert Down in the Sunny South is grown a tobacco which, when cured and specially prepared, and oked in pipe or cigarette, con- tains such flavor, such aroma, such freshness, that it will bring sweet consolation and contentment to the tired and nervous man, and @ smile to the face of the “grouchiest grouch.” This is the story told in a series of remarkable advertisements of Prince Albert tobacco, the nation- al joy smoke, ap ing in the Monday issues of this paper. They are rich in illustration, quaint humor and expression, and.are be — ing followed with keenest interest by the people of this city and vi cinity, Don't miss them. Watch for next Monday's paper.—Adver tisement. exonerated jay. It will be observed at the Armory, in conjunction with the Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ fair. Anybody wishing to get in on it with a display of home-grown stuff may get a card free from Supt. H. B. Hardt, in the Central building. That Seattle has the finest, billiard parlor in the world? Come in and see. jin | Alaska. STEAMS NORTH } The steamship Humoldt arrived) port earl yesterday from | Late last night she steam- | ed north again, having discharged and reloaded. LEARN TO PLAY Anyone wishing to learn the game of Pocket liards will get a world of information by attendin) the games played by experts every afternoon at 2:15 and every evening at 7:30 at the White House Billiard Par- lors, in the Joshua Green Building, Fourth and Pike. An academy with seating capacity for 300 people has been built fo accommodate the public. ‘ BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor Bil- Vigilance for Good Service VERY Bell chief. He hisimportant task is to see that the talk tracks, both inside and outside the exchange, are kept constantly in good working order. Day and night, the work of testing the lines and apparatus goes Complaints are promptly followed up and breaks are often repaired before the subscriber knows of the trouble or is inconvenienced. The constant vigilance of the wire chiefs keeps the 14,000,000 miles of talk tracks and the intricate central office equipment of the Bell system in readiness for instant service. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company on. Telephone exchange has its wire is xo ce to the subscriber, but