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™, ‘ | \ / $15 _ $10 It Hard aNew * Wanted—A man to act as prest-| dent of the Northwestern lea. Apply Northwestern league @ tors, Do not be surprised if you should run across such an appeal in the want ad columns of the daily newspapers. Fielder Jones has snapped his digits right in the faces of Dug and the rest of the magnates, and hopped over on the Federal side, and now the mighty moguls are in a quandary as to who shall be his successor. Jones went Fast a week ago, and last night notified President Farr of the Spokane club that he had condescended to act as manager of the lowly St. Louis Feds, in the DUGDALE FIELD | BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 SPOKANE VS. SEATTLE Admission 25¢, 500, 75¢ and $1.00 Take Fourth Ave. Cars | i orapen) O10 METHOD JIN DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replaced by ‘The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your original | teeth. Examinations ars tow be- ing conducted without charge, an4 estimates are furnished tn all cases We Stand Back of Our Wock for 12 Years’ Guarantee. Set of Teeth Guaranteed .. Set of Teeth Guaranteed .. Solid Gold or $10 Solid Other Fillings Office hours, 8:30 to 6. Sundays, 9 to 12. | OHIO) Cut-Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY STREET. CORNER SECOND AVENUE. AMERICAN CAFE FOURTH AND PIKE ERNEST GIANETTI, Proprietor. HIGH-CLASS ENTERTAINMENT FRENCH DINNER With Bottle of Wine—50c | | avy JOHNNY O'LEARY SAYS THAT GINK SHERMAN HIT THE NAIL ON THE HEAD. Kililiay, ef 9 Raymond, se : ° Fullerton, 9 Tie ae Swain, If ae tee Hubs, 1b Penney Gee eae | Brashear, 2b e328 James, Pe Be Cadman, © a ee ee ee ae mi ae ae 70 8 8 ie Mee fe ae ee Tota! oe 2 8 ] | aw Johnny O'Leary agre lon Johnny Bull, Young Czar a There is nobody around to « Mags Will Find to Get President place of “Three-Fingered” Brown, who has proved a dismal failure tn managerial capacities Melder should arrive back tn Portland within the next few days, and about the first thing he ts ex pected to do is hand tn his resis nation The magnates haven't the faint est idea wh to pick to fill the vacancy, George Russell, former postmaster; Bobby Blewett, Seattle business man; Tommy Evers, a former tobacco dealer, and Chas. Dean are mrentioned successors, Considerable credence is given a report that a movement is afoot to put a Seattle man on the throne. None of the directors is spill- ing crocodile tears over Jones’ jump, as a number of the club owners had been trying to put the president out of office all season. He had been given a chance to re sign, and would have been |“canned” after the present season if the resignation had not been forthcoming. Jones was the worst president the league ever put up with SCORES AND STANDINGS * Batted for Raymond tm pastiay 6. Ballard Casey NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Wen. Leet. Vancouver ... Spokane Seattle NATIONAL New Yorke . Cincinnatt . AMERICAN LEAGUE Won. Lost Philadetphia o 3% Boston sat Washington “4 Detroit ee Chicago St. Loute New Tork Chicago Ralttmore Brooklyn In@tanapo! Bafta! St Kansas City nae "a ans Pittsbure ee ee ann COAST LEAGUE Ww Loat. Portiand at fan Francisco “ Venice ° “ Los Angeles 5 Sacramento * Oakland . SEATTLE BUSINESS |« DIRECTORY Select from the Goods of the Fol- lowing Merchante—They Are Thoroughly Reliable and Solicit Your ronage. AWNINGS Awnings and Sleeping Porches to order. Estimates furnished free. Pennants and Cerwival Supplies. Linquist & Lund, Inc. 1104 Third Avenue. Phone Elliott 6340, RESTAURANTS _ erman Delicatessen Shop C. F. Baasch 913 THIRD AVE. CAFES 1 Merchants’ Lunch Elliott 2448 The Mecca Liquor Co. A. G@ DUCKWITZ, Manager 219 Union Street WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS Wines, L1GUORS, Clans _ FUNERAL DIRECTORS ~ SACREDNESS We shall not mar the sacredness, humiliate you or belittle our pro fession by viading for the burial or cremation of your loved ones, Let us know your wishes and they will be complied with. BUTTERWORTH & SONS MORTICIANS 1921. FIRST AVENUE oo amenniii cman 1 IN OTHER LEAGUES AMERICAN—Chicago 1-1, 1-9; Detroit 1%, Cleveland 6 ATIONAL—@t. Loule 6, lyn 6, Cincinnatt & FEDERAL —Paltimore 1, Chicago Indianapolis 1, Pittsburg 6; St. Louwts RT HW PST ERN—Pintiard edt Spokane 6-3, Tacoma 3-2, Satur- aliard 5, Seattle 2; Vancouver 8-8, Victoria 0-2; Tacoma 7, Spokane 6. COAST-—Onkiand 2-2, San Francisco 6-1; Bacramento 1-0, Portland 3-2; Venice i-f, Low Angeles 2-16 Bill James Leads Bill James, with 15 games won and 6 lost, is leading the list of Ne tional league pitchers. Doak of St. Louls is second, 12 and 4, and Mathewson comes third, 19-7. Hi Meyers leads the batters, and Jackson tops the Amer iean league, with Cobb second. NEFF GE A DRAW PRINCE RUPERT, Aug. 17.—Chet Neff left for Seattle today, after fighting a 20-round draw with Char ley Burns here Saturday night LANDWEHR LEADS Fred Landwehr was the leading gunman at the Harbor island trap- shoot Sunday, scoring 89 out of 100 shots TOURNEY OPENS ‘The national tennis tourney, un- der the auspices of the 8. A.C, began on the Blakistone courts to day. Many crack players are en tered ELKS ARE LICKED BELLINGHAM, Ang. 17-—The Vancouver Northwestern leaguers played the Elks here Sunday, and won, 8 to 0. Anything Delivered Anywhere. AUTO DELIVERY CO. Phone Fillott 254. 506 Olive at. | with an adjective of four letters. full, fighting around Vancouver, as probable} National league} with that guy Sherman, who deseribed war Before Kid Wilhelm agreed to ta’ nd K, 0. the fights. By Hugh S. Fullerton Frits Maisel, the diminutive third baseman of the New York | Yankees, is a sensation in the American league as a base runner. Malsel has passed Ty Cobb, | Clyde Milan, Eddie Collins and the other famous dase runners of the league. More than that, Maisel is destroying all the accepted percent- age of successful base stealing, He | ts on the bases many fewer times than are his rivals for the honors, | yet leads them in actual number of stolen basor I watched Matsel on the bases, He has speed and spryness, is a quick atari a speedy runner and a clever er, and {6 hard to touch the first jump. I was jbim with Benz pitching. achieved the Walsh and fs a hard man against Twice he and Maisel jockeyed, and twice Benz threw to first. Then he pitched once and Matsel stood still On the next ball Maisel took a jump even before Benz started to wind up, was 20 feet down the line and at top speed before the ball was on tts way to the plate, and, in spite of a good throw, be stole the base by five or aix feet. Up to present reading Cobb has [been on base 92 times and has stolen 14 bases, Milan has been on | first 103 times and stole Col lins reac firat 98 times and stole 31 bases and Maisel has been jon first 82 times and has stolen 34 bases Even more remarkable Is a two- week study of their actual efforts In those two weeks Maisel started to steal eleven times and atole nine bases, and was caught only twioe. In the same period Collins start- ed 13 times, and succeeded only in gix cases. at He gets into his stride at watching Bent has balk motion to get away Continued From Page 2 On our right they have already | pushed on the advance line. On) our left the skirmishers are just; breaking through the hedge opening out to extend our line of attack. The heavy noise in the afr is in- cessan'. I can't see where they are firing, and I can't see what they are fir- ing at. The air is heavy with fron thunder. It closes ike a ring round my chest. I am distinctly conscious that my chest is rever-| berating Hke a tense sounding-| board. | What on earth fs that? | A sound like the cracking of) whips from somewhere or other | |. . . the sound ts so sharp, so dis-| | tant, so Intermittent, as if it were| coming from the rifle-range. | Then—by my side a man falls down, falls on his rifle, and lies still, never stirs again . . . shot) through the head, clean through) the brain that's what the/ cracking of whips means; it’s com-| ing from over there, out of the! wood. Somewhere over there the! enemy's sharpshooters are lying and Lning Its edge and opening fire on us. What's the next thing? Lie down — Mark distance — Cover! But no order comes. We push on toward the wood undeterred, as lif these bullets did not concern us| in any way. The sharpshooters’ fire is not hot enough as yet; we have not, so far, got into sufficiently close touch with the enemy. As I move forward, 1 turn my head and look back. Behind me I see new lines of skirmishers ad-! vancing one behind the other—sup- ports to be pushed forward later. What is that crawling along the ground behind our line? . there is one here, another over there—it looks so novel and so odd, They are crawling back out of the firing line. And | see how one of the suddenly tries to rise, clutches hii rifle with both hands, and hauls/ himself to his feet by hi now he is spr tumbling over backwards, and fling- Ing his hands away from him, far apart. . . his hands are still flap- ping up and down on the grass. | am looking back as If fascinated | while my legs keep on advancing.) ee Buddenly something begins to set up a rattle over there in the wood and buzzes like huge alarm- clocks running down. “Lie down.” And there we are lying down, flat on our stomachs, as if we had already been mown down, for every man of us knows what that was. They have masked machine guns in the wood over there; they are opening fire on us. I feel how my heart is thumping against my ribs. A machine gun is equivalent to a company, the Old by the machine guns In the autumn maneuvers. What's the next thing? Cautiously, without raising, I turn my head, Behind us, too, the lines of skirmishers, close up to us, have disappeared from the face of the earth; they too, have gone to cover in the grass. Only outside the firing zone are they still being pushed forward. Shall we have to retreat? we going to attack? “Rapid fire! Into the wood!” Yes, but what are we to fire at? Lying down, there is nothing tc be seen of the sharpshooters. They won't do us any harm; ti another minute they will have dis lappeared among the trees. But the machinesthey have hidden them away among the follage to | gooa purpose, (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) Are i Poincare, and their playmates lin a battle royal, Johnny had been dragging down coin by the scoop: Now half the male populace hae | gone back home, and the other half ls helping fortify the Canuck tow |tell a wife what to do in r ke r) Two Pictures of Fritz Maisel, Sensational League STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 17, 1914. PAGE 7, PORTS) LITTLE MAISEL ECLIPSES BOTH TY COBB AND EDD IE COLLINS Base Thief of American THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE MARY IS HAVING HER TROUBLES Association.) IT had not seen Mary for two months until yesterday and I was shocked at her appearance. Poor girl! That “heavenly three weeks” up in the mountains seems to bh been about all the joy she had got- ten out of marriage. College seems to have completely ruined Jack. He has contracted habits which only a son of « multi millionaire could finance. What will happen when Dad Waverly Js not here (and I am sure he ts not going to live long) to put some sort of a restraint on him I do not know. “Margie, I am broken-hearted,” said Mary, “to think that you are going to take Aunt Mary away from me.” “I am not taking her away from you, dear; but she thinks she will be happier with Dick and me, and (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise you know Uncle Jobn particularly | gave will” “I have tried to make her happy, indeed I have, Margie,” said Mary, as the tears rolled down her face. “T know it, my dear girl, | know it, but" There was an uncom fortable sflence. Neither of us want ed to bring up the subject of Jack “Oh, I know it is much the best her to us to care for in his jfor Aunt Mary and I am selfish to want her, but oh, Margie, I don't know what to do. I am so unhap- py.” “Don't cry, Mary,” I said, and then I stopped and took her in my arms, for I thought perhaps ff she erted it would do her more good than {f she tried to keep all her troubles shut up in her heart. “Nobody seems to think of me or my feelings,” she said, between her sobs, and then I thought that 1 had not been very kind to her. Poor child! She has no relatives of her own and it Is mighty hard to face these new troubles alone, I know, for 1 have had to ft. “Well, Mary, dear, IT can’t advise you what to do in regard to Jack, as I do not think that any one can rd to her husband or how she must ar- range her married life. But if I were you, dear, I would go and talk to Dad Waverly; tell him just what you think and what you are trying to do. Why don’t you go over to the house some night and tell them both?” “Oh, I couldn't do that. Mother Waverly would never believe me.” “Y think she would if Dad was there to back you up.” “Margie,” she whispered, clasping my arm tightly, “I found a letter tn his pocket last night, after he was asleep, from another girl. He has been taking her out to supper, send- We guarantee the mupertority of the Lundberg Truss, and give free trial to prove it A. LUNDBERG CO. True! Deformity Applianc Artificial Limbs, 1107 THIRD AVEN and |x Mr. Out-of-Town Buyer Order your printing by mal) from FRANK P. NOLAN 1407 Fifth Ave. He will save you money on all printing orders, ty jua.sty ICE ex iCE DELIVERY CO. ELLIOTT 5560 ing her flowers and candy—doing the same things which he did for me before we were married, and) honestly, Margie, I have had only! ten dollars to live on for the last looked horrified, for 3 Please, dear Margie, don't think I am disloyal to him, bot I don't know what to do nor which way to turn.” } “I think the only thing you can do fs to tell this to his father and }mother. I'd try, but when I tell you what Jack's mother sald to me) this morning, you will see why I hate so to do it.” (To be continued tomorrow.) Independent club of California, on account of Inability to hit, marke the covering a has played ball in pretty nearly every minor league of note, he has never Graced a big league line-up ‘and Miss Miller and Miss Bragdon | Archibald |yo13 THIRD The release of Ernest “Kid” Mohler by the Woodland team, ct | THE ANCIENT KID IS DONE AFTER 26 YEARS’ SERVICE ON || BASEBALL DIAMOND ! Giants Drop 2nd Straight Series; Spokane Is Here attle’s pennant hopes sim mered down several degrees eaag,| after the poor showing the Giants made against the B rd Colts last week in the first intercity ser jes ever played here, Ballard took | Sunday and with it the serie This week the Giants are in third pl with Vancouver lead-| ing the race by a healthy margin.|— anaes Fair space separates Seattle from) THE VIRGINUS HOTEL Spokane The Ballard series Was) 4, virginia wt west a the second straight campaign ? ‘witott 803. “s dropped by tub Tike, Senitin ban ~ ee Regge oma a chance for revenge the week of| 21, when Ballard “comes| Seattle's defeat may be at-| tributed to the t that they have} never done very well on the road cee of a baseball career that extends over 26 years, and ea from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Although Mohler tio endin He was with the Portland Colts last year. SEATTLE HAS FIVE GOLF LINKS; LEADS OTHER N.W. CITIES When the new munict pal golf course ie opened on Beacon hill, Geattic will top the list of all other Pa cific Northwest cities in | the number of links, The city links give Seattle five courses—the Seattle Golf club, the Earlington Golf and Country club, the Unl- versity of Washington and the Country, club. There are also the Navy Yard In looking for the Seattle men, always turn the batting order up down—it’s easier on the nerves , Ray Dauters led the field of swimmer nival held t H in the annual water care y th A. C, Saturday, the 100-yard, 50-yard and events. » 5 to 2, and Vancouver, B. C, are second, with three finks mpiece. Spo- kane has two, and so has Victoria and Tacoma. Cities with one course in- clude Everett, Bellingham, White Bluffs, Eugene, Pendleton and Baker. EDW. PINKMAN took rd Red Neck Mike Lynch brings his “a ” Indians to Seattle today for a 70 TURN R week's engagement. Seattle goes to Victoria next Hi ek Modern, elegantly furnished outside . rooms, with the. best accommodations ti Edward Pinkman, 126-pound P.| Charles Pinchless Swain 1s still| fies? ey tranatents, toe. to Sie N. A. chempion, will surrender the | 0ltering within the .200 mark. The | Weekiy. $2.60 to $4 Conventently located title Tuesday night when he meets |!stest batting averages show him |fer walking and street cars Al Mosler or Walter Granger in|*@chored at the .304 notch. Wil- the headline bout at the Btks'|bolt continues to top the Ist rs tmoker, The bout turns Pinkman | Frisk and Neighbors follow in Free Admission order, Emil Huhn t ond of Se into a professional Bill Pierce, Bennie Farrell and Andy Duvall, three other amate will flop, meeting Herman mandey, Charley Davidson Steve Gardner, respectively. Play for Titles AT DREAMLAND attle’s sluggers. His mark is .278. Killilay comes third with .260. The rest of the Seattle team have thetr |love taps registered down in the ANUEACTURERS* MERCHANTS? INDUSTRIAL = FAIR ax- ARMORY. Au Weex, Aucust 177022) Arte i, RNOON AND EVENINGS : Arrractive AND INTERESTING ExHIEITOF RDEATTLE PR DUCTS Goop Music Daity 10 Dance Tickets for 25¢ Everyone Welcome F and Washington state tennis cham plonships were decided at the Se-| attle Tennis club Saturday as fol- lows: Henry Johns beat Breck; Van Dyke Johns beat Henry Breck; Johns and Breck beat Russell and Fulton; Sarah Livingston beat Miss Lambuth; Miss Livingston and Kel- leher beat Miss Lyell and Cardinall, Miss Livingston and Miss beat News for Watson LOS ANGELES, Aug. 17.—Inter- est in the Willie Beecher-Red Wat- son battle at Vernon Friday night increased today as 4 result of the Easterners showing in his train- To Defend Crown LOS ANGELES, Ang. 17.—John- ny Kilbane meets Johnny Dundee tn defense of the featherweight title Sept, 22 at Vernon. Articles were signed Saturday night, BULL BROS. Jusi Printers @AIN 1043 | P. A. jams_ joy in jimmy pipes ‘OU never smoked tobacco in your life that hits your taste and punches in satisfaction like Prince Albert It's the high spot any old way you hook it up, via a jimmy pipe or rolled into a makin’s cigarette! i 11 a cigarette that can compare with P. A. poe Be nig Bll ne other tobacco ever was like it. Just got the “more-ish" earmarks inevery puff, because the patented process cuts out the bite. = PRINGE ALBERT the national joy smoke Men everywhere smoke P. A. in a pipe and rolled rettes. Wise up that it is the goods: qi GSivered! Or ve cn lay a bet it woulda’t hit the fancy of such a bunch of red-blooded men. Sooner you lay a be pee? against : tidy i of ‘- A. one ou'll get yours! It’s simply a question o You'll HG one the P. A. band wagon sound the ibals Get it off your mind and let some P. A. « into your system Prince Albert is sold all along the line. Beat it around the corner and ger yours. use it’s a bad noise to tease your smo! ite so.° Toppy red (handy for rolling ern; tidy red tins, 10c; aleo ‘pound humidors. i