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{ F + t ‘j ~ DECLARES FE BUCK THE NORTHWESTERN FNelder Jones, who has ppe over to the Federal league crowd, {a expected in Seattle today to meet the directors of the Northwestern league for the purpose of handing | DUGDALE FIELD BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 SPOKANE VS. SEATTLE Admission 25c, 50c, 7T5c and $1.00 Take Fourth Ave. Ca =o Go East Now Summer Excursion Tickets on) Bale Dally until Sept. 30, 1914, to all principal Eastern points, ‘Take Your Vacation or Business Trip Via | | OREGON SHORT LINE and UNION PACIFIC Going limit 15 days; final return Mmit October 81, 1914. Liberal going and coming. rmation regardim: fares, tickets, schedules, reserva- tions, apply to J. H. O'NEILL, D. P. A. 716 Second Ave. Tel. Main 932. WALTER JOHNSON) WILL PITCH ONE) INNING FOR $50.00;| | IT’S WORTH IT, TOO. JONES 1S COMING TODAY: | eventually |_Ni irVv. It cost a Decatur, IIL, fan $50 the other day to son In action for one Inning of an exhibition gam: team played in that burg. The fan with the expectation of seeing the peerless Wal! 0 Washin: r do the hurling. | Walter saw to it that the man got his moneys worth, | | dalte and fanned three men. GOOD CARD FOR ELKS’ FIST SHOW DERALS WILL in his resimnatio: Preatdent Farr, of the Spokane club, ts already to }the city, and the other outside at rectors are known to be hither bound Jones will get a pretty cold re MAIN EVENTS 4, Pinkman ve Walter ge 1! Plerce ve. Lawrence Fer- mandez, ception and everything will be very Billy Farrett ve. Chariey | business-like. Dug will give him a] | Davie. wide berth, for they are about as|| Steve Gardner ve. Andy Du- chummy as a couple of young wild | | vall. | cats. Fielder, since joining the} } lily Willlame ve. At Mosler. | Pederals, has said his league will |® - The boxing season in Beattle, jafter remaining closed during the | Warm summer months, will reopen tonight with the above card. The bouts will be staged In the spacious Elks’ gymnasium Pat Scott, physical director of the clud, has charge of the smoker, and in matehing the boys for tonight made careful selections in order that all the bouts will be evenly contested. Pinkman fs P. N. A, 125-pound champion until tonight, when his professional appearance automat}. cally deprives him of his amatear standing and title. and Farrell a end into this seo tion of the continent, and that he will see that Dug gets a big dose. Jones says two teams will be put into Seattle in the event that a minor league ts established to buck the Northwestern, and de- velop young players. So it will not be surprising if Dog emanates a loud, long “Iiip, hip, hoorah” when Fielder breaks the news to the magnates at their session here that he has found It necessary to resign. When told of threatened by Jones, Dug sald: “My compliments to Fielder Jones. I've been tn baseball 26 years and you never noticed me quit, Jones couldn't even give our league a rub with a Federal minor league.” Jones will undoubtedly have enough trouble of his own tn h endeavor to lift the lowly St. Louis Feds out of the cellar, let alone formulating plans for an invasion of the Northwest. the hostilities also amateurs, CRACKS COMPETE SOUTHAMPTON, N. 18.—- Brookes, Murray, Un, Johnston and R. Wiliams are among the ers entered play the Meadow club tennia tourney hore. CENTRALIA GETS IT CENTRALIA, Aug, 18.-—Defeating AMROCK ARRIVES | Tacoma, 6 to 3, the local Moose YORK, Aug. 18.--Shamrock | league team clinched the pennant Sir Thomas Lipten's cup char lenger, arrived here Monday aftter-| noon and went att once to its win- ter quarters. WHERE’LL WE LO8 ANGELES, Aug. 18.—Leach Cross was scheduled to depart to- day for New York. | | | l Have Cut Prices iD THE QUALITY cents on Dental Work and without to any and get prices, then cor examination and conmlta- without charge, and [I will show how to save s Dollar and I make @ Dollar on your Dental Work. My prices will surely eult you. My work will surely please you. BEWARE OF IMITATING IMPOS- TORS OF MY NAME AND S1GN8 JUST NEXT DOOR TO MY OFFICES. EDWIN J. BROWN, D.D.S. Seattle's Leading Dentist. 705 and 713 Firet Avenue, Open evenings untli # and Sundays HALL. PEOPLE Finds That All Girle Mary | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper ? Enterprise Association.) “What do you mean, Mary,” I © | asked, as Jack's wife began to tell me that his mother had hurt her The proposal for the city and| feelings to such an extent that she county to become partners “4 by je? she could not go to see her maintaining of a city-county build in. ing met eres opposition in the city} “What did she for council yesterday when Councilman} “Well, tt wasn't #0 much what Cooley introduced a bill providing | she said to me,” walled Mary, “as for a bond issue to be submitted| thd general fmpresston that she at the fall election to raise money| save me of being sure that I was for the building of two stories on/| not the kind of a wife Jack should top of the new court house, have married, Margie, don't you The original idea of city’s| think I have been a good wife to renting two stories from the county | Jack?™ is approved by the city officials, “Much better than he has been but they don't think the two gov-|to you, dear,” I said, as I put my ernments would get along under aj arm about her. joint ownership plan. Another! Mary burst into tears. When trouble with this scheme Is that the/ seh could talk, she told me that county can’t seem to raise the|she had not seen Mother Waverly money with which to bulld the two| since Aunt Mary came to be with additional stories. me. Mayor Gill spoke against Coaley’s| “She is such a creature of moods, bill and suggested either renewal} Margie. She can be the sweetest of the city’s lease on the Prefon-|thing you ever saw and the very taine building or its outright par-| next minute she acts as though she chase. Hans Pederson, its owner,| hated you. wants $175,000 for it. “When my baby was born, she Mayor Gill oppqsed erecting a| was lovely to me as long as I was wntil 4 for people who work. LEARN TO PLAY en th Any one wishing to | get a world of information by experts every afternoon at 2:15 a At the White House Billiard Parlors in the Joshua Green Building, An academy with seating capacity for 300 people has been bullt to accommodate the public. a ANUFACTURERS* MERCHANTS INDUSTRIAL FAIR » A |} moved into my apartment I have i Ar |been wanting to make some dough- Au Weex, Aucust 17722 ) yo) ) EATTLE PR Goop Music DAity ame of Pocket Billiards will ittending the games played by ind every evening at 7:30 temporary building on City Halljat the hospital, but when I began park. to go to housekeeping she told me Cooley, in defending his bill, said| that she thought I was very fool- the city would save $9,000 a year) ish, and I don't know Dut she was now spent in rentals. right. Further consideration of the mat-| “Somehow, I thought that the ter will be given next Monday. ability to keep house was born tn ir : Apaaaree a mae: every woman. I thought of delight- ful dinners, but never realized what dirty work it was to prepare a chicken properly for those din- ners, I thought bad — of . white linen, the glisten of ass Mayor Gill told the Washington) nq the shining sheen of silver, Hotel Keepers’ association at the/ bur forgot the dirty, greasy pots Washington hotel last night ff they | anq pans must be washed. band together strong enough they “I am not complaining, Margie. can control the next legislature 60/1; am only trying to tell yon that far as regards hotel interests. T have found out that housekeep- He scored the prohibition Init! ing is « business, and I am afraid ative measure on the ground that/ 41 women are not fitted for it it is defective and won't make for) yoy gee, 1 never, in all my life, prohibition, knew anything about keeping a eA honse, and I don't seem to learn A STAR WANT AD will) very quickly. 1 forget and let the sell it quickly. water bofl out of the potatoes while I am practicing a new song. I guess Mother Waverly is right; T am not a success as a wife. And yet, Margie, I think if I had not tried to keep house and could have been dressed and ready to go with Jack when he wanted me it would have been much better. Surely he conld not have stayed away from a boarding house any more than he haa from his home. Fourth and Pike. “You can’t put all young mar tied people into the same cate gory, Margie, “We women seem to live by tra- dition, instead of reason. We must do thus and #0 because many other women have done thus and so and found it expedient. “Yes, I think Mother Waverly was right about me keeping house, but now that I am keeping house it seems to me she might give me the benefit of her experience.” “My dear Mary," I sald, “she doesn't know any more about housekeeping than you do,” I pro- tested. “You know, Margie, that my mother was a New England wom- an; she was a splendid cook, and |}I have her cookbook. Ever since nuts like ‘mother used to make.’ I did it this morning and they were AFTERNOON AND EVENINGS. just fine, I wanted to bring you Attractive AND INTERESTING EXHIBITOF [over some, Margie, but I was ashamed to bring them to this grand place. But I did take some over to Mother Waverly, and what do you think she did? She took that poor little plate of doughnuts, of which I was so proud, and looked {t over rather contemptu- lously, and then she asked: “Mary, do you think you can af- ford to.make these cakes? “It was all I could do to keep the tears back until I got out of the ‘house. And, Margie, Jack would not touch them—said he did not care for such things. “Oh, what will I do, Margie? What will I do? I just don't seem UCTS wJOCENTS li »D St Walter John- gone to the exhibition contest apectator was so disappointed he gave Walter $50 to pitch one Inning. He threw al M'GREEVY QUITS LEAGUE: Pierce, Duvall | igton The RALPH FRARY Ralph Frary, who disappeared mysteriously early in the season, and later turned up in Juneau, Alaska, has been reappointed to the staff of Northwestern league um- |pires, President Jones made the ap- |polntment yesterday, when Umpire | McGreevy, hate of the Pacific Coast and American leagues, tendered his ‘@ | resignation, Beattio— ABR HPO A F Kilttlay, of 412 8 @ @ Raymond, os. a4 . 4 ie Swath, if . Bes Wee are ae Hahn, 1b oa Se eS irashear, 8 @ 008 Jamon, Sve" O38 | ena: ge JE RS Mb | Yee ae 8s Be tue #93 1 7 20 87 «(fF ABR HPO. A . | Warn, a> hye Wt ae ae ~| Butler, «= ¢e¢18 2 Hogan, of o 1 2 @ 6 Yr tet Na ee Sa } Rh, ie | o. 2 @ on we ae Ge ee’ o1 0 64 2 8 4 a8 -LOeee18 2 e—7 6010006001—% Two-base hite—wain 2, Killilay, Gipe Stolen basee—-Friek, Wutfl, Double plays 1, Spokane 1. Struck out 4% Nases on balle—Glpe 6, No: mpire—Casey Are Not Born Housekeepers to belong.” It seems that a plate of dough- nuts can spoil more than a good digestion. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) INSTALL WIRELESS UPON EIFFEL TOWER PARIS, Aug. 18.-——A wire- lesa station on the top of the famous Eiffel tower will en F In touch with Russian head- quarters without interfer. ence. It will send ite mes- sages beyond the German empire and keep in com- munication with the Rus sian allies by the way of Malta and Cyprus. CONVENTION ON The convention of the Northwest Merchants’ association will open tomorrow at the Frye hotel. Al- ready 41 towns In this state, Ore- son and Idaho are represented by delegates, and more are coming. SANDERSON’S PILLS For women only. Most popu- lar and only reliable remed: Cures the most obstin canes tn 3 to 10 days. Pric $2 box or % boxes for # Money returned if they fail Call or write, Open evenings The Talk of the Town. Have you heard about it? The handsomest Cafe in America. Viola Farrell heading a great show of 12 people. Monday, July 27 ADELINE FILDES. J. I. Johnson, Gen. Mgr. E. G. Wood, Amnt. Mgr. What You Want te Knew: oS caer 111, It BE TERMANEMT? wHat WiLL IT My Offices Consultation, Examination and Diagnosis I confine m and nervous women, such ° eenpee chronie aliments of ft LIVER, STOMACH, BOWRLS, KIDNEYS, BLADDER, SKIN, BLOOD, PIhwS, VARI- COBK VEINS, ULOWRS, BTC. DR. DONAWAY Maite 303-9-4 Cor. Third and Union, Seattle. STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1914, PAGE 7. AS A NORTHWESTERN UMP ,| ment raise money, If necessary, by As REAPPOINTED Frary has since returned from} Alaska, and a few days ago applied, for a Heense to tend ‘bar in Van- | couver, | It is thought Frary will go to| work immediately, Frary is an um-| pire of big league caliber, and got| along better than any other man| who has held an {ndlcator in the North western. The fans will welcome his return. | Nap Rucker, star hurler with the utmost to get back his once wonderful it was when he was one of the most feared twirlers in the old final resort, Rucker is now havin, BOY WHO SHONE HERE WAS SCHOOLED WITH FAMOUS M’ LOUGHLIN AN DYKE JOHNS, the California younster who captured the Washington championship, state singles and with Henry Breck, copped the doubles title, Is a graduate of a tennis schoot In Call- fornia, which has turned out some of the best players the world has ever known. Maurice McLoughlin, the greatest player In the uni- hie tennis me school who hi played in Seattle, and ts one of the foremost racquet wielders In America, ls an- other from the same school. The echool takes only boys between the ages of 10 and 18 years. tuition a William Johnsto —r Brooklyn Nationals, Is doing his hurling wing in the shape gue. undergo a baking | g hi by a Brooklyn physician, who has diagnosed Rucker’s trouble pi ae deltoid bursites.. Brooklyn fans await the outcome with interest. CINCINNATI, Aug. 18—All hata in the baseball world are off to George Stallings, } IN OTHER LEAGUES a4 pga “ AMERICAN — Washington 1-4, York 0-4; Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 6 NATIONAL —- orton 11-6, Cincinnati 1-8; St. Louie 4, Philadelphia 1; 4, Brookiyn 0; New York 7, Pit RAL nokiyn i, Kansus polie §, Pittsburg 7 WESTERN-—Seattie 7, Spokane Ballard 4, ome 1 n COAST Vancouver 2; Victoria 2, No games scheduled NOKTHWESTERN LEAGUE we Lost. Vancouver Spokane Beart) CRISTO em Victor! Vancouver— ARR HPO A FE Tacoma . fhaw, rf . Z $ © 1 6 6 6 Ballard Hennett, 2 1 e ' ’ ° MeCart, Ib 4 ; sf : °| NATIONAL LEAGUE beatin Won Lost ¢ 2 1 % &) R, Fulton, W. C. Speidel, G. A.| New Tork . 4k $ 8 i 4 S| Latzure, 8. C. Sinughter, A. J.) Boon s oe o| West, J, O'Connor, BE. L. Crider, R.| chicago . 1 ee | °|'T, Stafford, B. Reynolds, Mansel | Brooklyn ts * * _*\ smith, Mogg, Fleming, F. G. Staf-| Phisderphie HH : 1s 1|ford, Johnson, B. C. Lee, Brown, | cincinnatt 2... rr) " A nn 4 © | Meyers, Van Kuran, and Speldel —— : ee § $|and Cole and Bortes and O'Connor maermantn wes ML Melchoir, 1 6 © ¢| won their matches in the 8. A. C.| pyiadeiphie \ a. ee p Pats * 4 ° © ¢|national tennis tourney, which | Boston 47 657 |Memune. 2b 1 4 3 5. 91opened yestortay. pdm ypestthecmelebasgl Ee Mlle Willtama, Ib . o 1 * oe a ecm 6 406 Be ie ae SMITH FIGHT OFF te lan e 2 2 6) LONDON, Aug. 18-—The sudden New York te 409 ae ® ©) stiness of Young Ahearn has caused “'eve4r¢ ate o4 v pa haedane 3 a7 «4 © 80 32 ©| the postponement of his scheduled FEDERAL LEAGUE a eee aé 0% bout with Gunboat Smith tonight. a bef = 2 Chicago . ‘ Two-base Wits Galen! 2. Rhaw.” Stolen STEINFELDT DEAD Brooklyn. ts peeve. ¥ Ato we Mittigas, Outent CINCINNATI, Aug. 18.—Harry tndianapoite rt) crifice hite-—Hiester, Williams, Struck | Steinfeldt, former big league play-| Buffalo 52 oat—Doty 6, Peter 6 Raere o te epety & Peterson 6 Wapire berm | er, succumbed at his home in Bel-| 5t, Loute rH sides. | tevue, Ky., yesterday. | Pittaby 4 THE CONFESSIONS OF A wire | GOVERNMENT OWNED SHIPS WANTED NOW By Gilson Gardner WASHINGTON, Aug. 18— Government ownership of ships to carry merchandise appears to be the only answer to the present demand for facilities to carry American export and im- port commerce now almost completely stopped by the | European war. John Sharp Williams has intro- duced a bill in the senate for a gov- ernment-owned merchant marine. ‘The senate has passed the Weeks bill for establishing U, 8. naval mall lines between the United States, South America and Europe. The secretary of the navy pro- poses seven war cruleers of an aver age capacity of 20 passengers and 160 tons of mail matter; four pas- senger and freight steamers with a capacity of 76 first-class and 32 steerage passengers, and 11,000 tons of freight, and six colliers car- rying no passengers, but 6,000 tons of freight, the average ship. Representative J, W. Bryan of. Washington has introduced a bill providing more sweepingly for gov- ernment ownership of a merchant marine. Mr. Bryan would have the govern- bonds, at once, to buy or build suf. ficient ships to carry the commerce. His bill provides for converting this carrying trade into government monopoly just as the postal service is now conducted. DON'T GET RAISE A 10cent raise for firemen tn mines, but none for the miners themselves, is the result of the conference here of coal operators of District 10 of the United Mine Workers of America, which closed yesterday. Battleships Cruisers Submarines | Dry Docks Can Be Seen at Navy Yard Bremerton S. S. H. B. Kennedy LEAVES COLMAN DOCK 8, 8. H. B, Kennedy leaves Colman Dock 0, 10:80 a. m 1:80, 6:30 p.m. Other boats at 8 a. m, and 2 p. m, Fare, round trip, 50c, dren, & to 12, 250. Chil. @ @ e e * e Cal. lemons, crate @ Cantaloupe’ @ Cooking @ Cal @ Plum @ Grap @ Cal, | Lo aches see 80 Local Peat“ brotusers ‘foe Batter, eal and Actress Stuck in Europe; New Play Can’t Open ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug. 18.—With vistons of the bread line before her, Miss Ethel Valentine of St. Louis has cabled friends here of her dis- tress in famine-threatened Paris. Miss Valentine had secured pass- age on the France, but this and many other boats have cancelled their transatlantic trips, thousands of Americans stranded in Paris. Unless Miss Valentine reaches New York within the next 10 days, the opening of the play “Today” will have to be postponed, as she {s to play the leading role in the produc tion. Prices Paid Producers tor Vegetables and Fruit (Corrected Gatly by J. W. Godwin &@ Co.) to Veal, Vent, large «+ pod leaving U.S. GIRLS IN A MAD FLIGHT FROM EUROPE By Mary Boyle O'Reilly LONDON, Eng. Aug. 18.— Thousands of American tour- lets are still in Europe. And, though American am- bassadors and consuls are pull- ing all the official wires at thelr command In an effort to pull thelr countrymen out of the zone of danger there’s |it- tle hope that steamship sched- ules will be restored for weeks to come. The conditions on the continent are appalling. Thousands of Americans are stranded without means or oppor- tunity to reach a place of safety. Girls Are Bottied Up In the Swiss Oberland, the cities of the Zuyder Zee, the Ger man Netherlands, the Rhine vil- lages, at cures like Wiesbaden or Marienbad, American women and girls are bottled up in little quiet villages where they lived in abso- lute ignorance of what was trans- piring in the big world, with no in- timation of the ropean confla- gration so soon to break. Saturday morning, August 1, Paris seemed quiet, only one could obtain no change for a five-franc ($1) note, Outside Cook's Tourist Agency a chalked message notified inquiring travelers that all excursions were canceled by order of the govern- ment. “Get out of Paris as soon as you can,” said the consul. ce was bad. Germany w: worse. Foreign automobiles ha’ their tires taken off to be searched for war correspondence and every car was searched for bombs. Germany was already in a state of siege. Soldiers stood on the roofs of public buildings, peering through glasses for French airmen, wheel- barrows full of swords crowded the railway platforms, crowds of Ger mans stood about chanting “Die Wacht am Rhein. At Cologne guns were mounted on the roof of the cathedral. At Dirsschon soldiers held load- ed revolvers to the carriage win- dows, threatening with instant death any attempt to throw dyna- mite at the bridges. | NAP TRY TO COME BACK; SORENESS IN ARM TO BE BAKED OUT. BILL JAMES BEATS PETE: SCHNEIDER IN DESPERATE MAJOR LEAGUE ENCOUNTER | manager of the) RUCKER WILL Boston Braves. His feat of piloting the Boston aggregation from last place to that | of a contender for the National pen- | nant is regarded as one of the most emarkable in modern baseball. A month after the season started Braves apparently were tightly wedged in last place. Today they are separated from first place by the narrow margin of 2% games, and Manager McGraw of the New York Giants, the league leaders, ad- mits he fears Stallings and his men, Boston continued its mad race yesterday by wresting both games of a double-header from the Cincin- nat! Heds. In the second game Bill James, star of the Braves’ pitching staff, and leading National league flinger, with 16 gaines won and 6 lost, op- posed Pete Schneider. Both James and Schneider graduated from the Seattle, Wash., club. It was a fierce pitching duel from start to finish, the two teams divid- ing 14 hits. Boston scored their hits into five runs to Cincinnati's three. James is 22 years old, and came to Boston in 1912. Schneider is a year James’ junior, and joined Cin- cinnati during the present season, In every business—in your business—the time comes when cash must be quickly raised to meet a pressing need. 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