The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 19, 1914, Page 7

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fi The directors of the Northwest. gra league went into seasion again|ignation yesterday and it was| The directors wore a weary look|day. "I waited in the hotel lobby |f “20, Which they intend to establish in Cleveland next season, Two crack Seattle amateur box-jner, who has given some good a& MH at 9 A m. today, after a long,| unanimously accepted, Jones re-|today, as many belloved it would| three-quarters of an hour aloes th en i iyo ge oe gh ye <b 4 none bl by ers made good in their profession- counts of himself around Seattle, MH drawn out conference yesterday | turned to Portland last night, | require another 10 or 12 hours be-|the rest. of the directors came || che, Cleveland fans, and the wisdom of the Federal move Is readily }) a1 gebut at the opening Elks'|and won the referee's favor. which lasted 10 hours without re-| It was reported today that, /fore any agreement ia reached. It| downstairs soon, smoker last night Rennie Farrell, who bas done @ a sult, in an effort to elect a auc| following the adjournment at |is known that the majority of as-| “If I find that it is true the a-|1 pou rend, "cently was about to consummate a Sent wie. Edward Pinkman gave up the little a ur fighting, hooked up cessor to Fielder Jones, who has| midnight, five of the directors | ptrants for the job are Seattle men,| rectors are conspiring to give mo|{ Owe for the transfer of Lajoie, but the famous Keystoner refused i125 5ounq Pp, N, A. championship| with Charley Davideon, and ’ resigned to take over the manage:| retreated to another room for |and the most prominent of thess|the worst of it. I shall certainly do|{ °° 247 with the Browns, and this plan was dropped. in order to meet Walter Granger,|after four hard-fought rounds, J ment of the St Louls Federal a secret conference from (is Robert Blewett, an attorney,| all in my power to have Seattle en-| |a professional, in the main event Billy Williams settled his long : league club. While the magnates! which Dugdale wae excluded. | who formerly pitched for the Bos-|franchised tn the Pacific Coast | a CARRERE hee ds es eee ca lof the show. Pinkman scored an standing dis with Al : are reticent concerning the meet-| This was denied by Chairman ton Nationals and Washington.|league, I don’t know whether or | easy victory after four fast ery Al all around : ing, {t is believed the deadlock 1s Bob Brown today, who sug | Blewett is Dugdale’s candidate, lnot I will au od, but at the and had his opponent in bad outclassed him . the outcome of a concerted effort) gested that thie rumor, possi- | “I have positive information that| same I'll gtve them a fight.” in the final round. The a 7 by Presidents Dugdale and Farr,| bly, was caused by the fact the directors held a second meet-| Dug admitted if his Coast league was popular. ® picking the winner, t the Seattle and Ballard owners, to) that several of the directore (ing for the purpose of plotting! plans fall through, he has some- Andy Duvall, while not a cham Ivan Miller knocked Hill out im t put a local man fnto offica st went to another room seeking | against me, and the interest of the! thing else up his sleeve. plon in the amateur ranks, was one one round. 7 * B08 a EER RETR | of the foremost 145- pounders in t Charley Hulen and Nate Dram mice... AP % % PO-& B | Northwest. Duvall met Steve ( man acted as judges. - 0| Bennett, ‘(13116 = ange — ace gaa " 66 99 H “ae lag tees he ea aeerEweeas qualify in the first round of the - , BF We ee ae | open cham hip bere Tuesday. : Hy . : H : H Hy “4 do B mvpas « of Tacoma, also @ of¢ 4.8 28 aig] Sou | Han, om or ened - | |The Soldier Tells His Feelings in Dash Into Cannon Fire ee a iti] GUNNERS MEET : - ae Soh fen RAYMOND, Aug. 19-—Fifty-ming : | L ns eh WFO. e pet |Shooters competed in the first } By Wilhelm Lamszus marched hither and lace the right and left te and all But whatever may be trying to) worn \ i .. 3 Sar Seat Ge e7a|\day’s program of the Pacific In- | hi ut us nothing but swamp, run-|/draw us down to Itself from below,| mut! ee Re es ee Ee t . (Master of a Large Public Schoo!) thither. jning out fnto a broad sheet of open| we trample underfoot. "| Hon ee Oe HR ie ¢ 1 0 6 ss | uae oot Cee ee 3 copvarann me? Sanat The fight had drawn water, the depths of which no one| The shoulders of a form emerge. " faa oe a ie Te Ape | s23| the 120-target event. | a tt be re xe ee 462| Troe { Coe enic’ A. STOKES CO.) | Rearer and nearer. |can guess, or tell whether It be ford-| They plunge down again and dle-| Kris it Be 5G a Oe a ie i rooniys ane McOY TO FIGHT | We were expecting to cok eppear. Norayke, 1b a et ics ae ciate yhtladel phim 4:7| SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 19— 2 CHAPTER VII be ‘under £ | The faces of drowning men| Altman, « eR Be. 8: 2 ae tncinnatt ... 449 Kid McCoy will try a “comeback” under fire at any mo- | ‘The head of the column {# al-|emerge and cleave to the light and| ***nley. P pS Se Pa $54 asieecaw Sept. 4 with Charley Horn as am ment and then we had to [ready swinging round and we are|sink gurgling Into the depths. i sein Faia a ae 146M ee re ret.Jopponent. They will fight four ’ fall back again, and look a our meee, aware the de} Lost arme wave about In the alr) | Totals 2 Eee is ii niladeiphia $14) rounds . je to get out of the rat-trap. and try to find support thi | TEM. ae TN ° 444 ————— for a new place to de- And in the middle of the|face of the water. We dodge t = ie ARE Roi OP aca Sic ibatl HH START ON DOUBLES velop our attack. meadow | arma, for whomever they may selze|. Thres-base | hte wn ag Maa ~ ger ‘st| The doubles round of the nm It seemed as if the or- “Halt! Form sections!" they drawn down with them to|T*o:base hite—twain, falveson 6, Bases on balle—ttat! | Bt 48¢| tional tennis tourney, being om were contradictory, and 1 ,one ettioare have assembled and’ (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) | ley In 14 innings: ¢ hite, 1 run off Deli IN OTHER LEAGUES cudnt alanine today. : rs -wowtng. in @ tant to Btani o ERA, me this tension of uncertain- | We seem to have lost touch. | to Dell, Birbck oat—Hughes 1 Deut 7 AMERICAN—Detroft 1-1, Philadelphia Won, Lost. Pet. COASTERS 8TAR ty fell like a blight on Tho sergeant beside me is swear| GERMAN CRUISERS Tn a hare comagy lahat, (or 1 is], SOUTHAMPTON, Aug. 19--ie ; ing up his sleeve, and is cursing ana Cinetnnatt 1] Indtamapo! 49 ‘t4g|LAndley Murray and Elia Fottrell |. our spirits, and got on |! Guveiiing anon tinser aan HAVE TURK CREWS) BROWN CAN 8TAY - | Brooklyn 4s ‘t04| starred in yesterday's matches for 3 | the nerves both of offi- (djing man’s butt, fs ee | er. toms Aue. dca Bt ig fo 415) the Meadow club tennis cup, For a whole of the fore- cers and men. I am gazing up meditattvely at) CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 19—/prown, who has been succeeded by Kansas Cliy sc.cccscc) 48 62 4 RACES 8IX HEATS noon we had heard firing At length we had [the heights, overgrown with trees) The German cruisers Goeben and| Fielder Jonos as St, Louls Fed . Pittwoarg «----------- 46 $1 488] preapuRG, Aug. 19-—Wareee ; in the distance, the thun- wound through a defile, ei ft ee dag Catalin Breslau, rechristened with Turkish manager, will get a manager's sal- Tacome ¢, Vietoria 6; Vancouver OUIMET STICKS Gentry won ‘the 2:16 trot in the ¥ der of cannon and the rat- the steep slopes of which, ald be If we were to| names, were manned today with|ary if he remains with the club as|* COAST" Ventoo 9, @an Francteco 1;!_ CHICAGO, Ill, Aug. 19.—Francis! Pittsburg Driving club's meet yes left and right, were thick- Ld grown with trees. Things had got into a bit of a mess. Our regiment kad been es tle of musketry. | DUGDALE FIELD ' | We had had to force our way a ASEBALL through undergrowth soaked with rain, through brambles and clumps : Tomorrow at 3:00 Pg broom on which the green pods were still pendent. SPOKANE VS. SEATTLE | At times there was nothing fn : Admission 25¢, 50c, 73¢ and $1.00) sicht except the roof and wall of Take Fourth Ave. Care | greenery. | cee We breathed more freely when aky spread clear over- at last the head again. So now we have reached a green | meadow and are marching straight | across It, but are still unable to see anything of the enemy's forces yet. Even the firing has died down, and has become more distant than before. It seemed as tf we had come into | another, remoter world, and-—#o wo have; for soon we notice how soft Scenic Cafe FIRST AND STEWART j_-_ ______} A Place | feet, how water {s oozing every step. We shall, if we go on, be right }in the middle of a swamp. That is the reason of the solitude reigning all around us. ‘The terrain is impracticable. up at FACTURERS* MERCHANTS INDUSTRIAL FAIR az ARMORWY_- Au Weex, Aucust 17722 AFTERNOON AND EVENINGS Artractive AND INTERESTING ExHiBiT OF EATTLE PR Goor, Music Daity MY ABILITY TO | CURE TUBERCULOSIS | cannot be questioned in the face of constantly | authenticated cures right in your midst Do you know of any other physician who can do ft, here or elsewhere? They can bulla sanatoria out of marble, but not a case can they eure. READ THE TESTIMONIAL Walla Walla, Wash., December 28, 1908. = Dr. J. Bugene Joréan, Seattle, Washi Dear Doctor Jordan—Although we have never met, I consider Tam addressing # dear friend, for have you not been the means of saving my life? In the spring of 1908 I became very sick with consumption. Was greatly weakened and emaciated; coughed up quantities of use. Had night eweats and daily fever, with very rapid pulse. Yas white as a ghost. A number of reputable physicians here pronounced my disease consumption, advising that T remove at once to a mild climate, where I could lve out of doors all the time, saying nothing I could do otherwise would save my life. I was trying to arrange my business to comply with théir advice when @ friend here informed me you had cured him of consump- tion, and praised your treatment so highly that I was persuaded to try your medicines. The result astonished me and my friends In two weeks the {improvement was #0 marked that I was encour- aged to continue treatment. In three months’ time I was com pletely cured of consumption, and have stayed cured. My address is Walla Walla, Wash. I remain yours very sincerely, E. M. EABERT. The above testimonial, Itke the many others which have appeared {nm this journal, demonstrates the thoroughness and permanency of Doctor J. Bugene Jordan's cures of Tuberculosis, Asthma, Annemin, | Blindness, Bright's Disease, Ulceration of the Bones, Chronic Catarrh, Chronic Inflammation of the Bladder, Deafness from Paralysis of the Aaditory Nerves, Diabetes, Prolapsus Uterl, Dro GA Chronto Dyspep- sia, Epilepsy, Epithelioma (skin cancers), Chronic Brysipelas, Chronto Gastraigia, Hard Lumps in Breast, Heart Disease (including Heart || Leakage). Hip Disease, Infant ralysis, Locomotor Ataxia, Solat- en, Henile Gangrene, Spinal Curvature, Atrabismus, St. Vitus’ Dance, eeration of Stomi ‘or Bowels and most other so-called incurable sensor. There being a number of Doctors Jordan in Seattle, it 1s well to | bear in mind the full name and address of Doctor J. Hugene Jordan, 2d. % Viret av., Seattle. Office hours, 9 a. m. to § p. m.; Sundays trom . m. to 6 p.m. Conenitation free,’ Correspondence solicited. Watch | each Wednesday Star for remarkable cures. Fielder Jones tendered his res-) refreshments, |the ground has become under our! have to make our way back to the! Ottoman crews. defile now, and in the thick of it |the enemy was to break in on us | right and left-——no man would come jout of it alive—the battle of the| | Teutoburger forest recurs to me— Tam trying to make out {f they are oaks or beeches over there——/ Of a sudden there is a finsh of }lightning from the undergrowth; | {the very firmament cracks and/ |eways as if {t were going to fall in| on us... . | “Lie down!” Horror screams somewhere or other. | And trembling we ie down. and over our heads rushes some j thing that howls for our flesh... .| | What's the next thing? Up and lat them now! Rush etraight at the) }guns. Suffocate thetr fiery mouths) with our flesh and bones, | “Up! Get up!” } “ee The captain comes up to us at al run. The breath of the fron holds us) tight pressed to the ground as if| jin a vice... . Turn your head awey. Now! Now! Then—A-o-h! The vault of heaven has cracked above us and has spurted down on to the sand from above. Life ia lying there wriggling on the earth, and the hands that were | clawing the ground are now clutch- | ing idly at the shattered air. | _Lrise to my feet again.... 1! have | not been hit. But the man who leaped up be side me—he Is lying fiat in the sand and screaming In a broken voice. He Is lying as If he had beew nalled firmly through hie stomach to! the earth, and as if he could not) get free egain. The body iteelf Ie dead, only the) a ind |i are etill alive. And) are working wildly | arms and | through the a | eee | “Upt Get up! Quick march!” a) voice yells in our ears. We no longer know who !t ts shouting to us and we don’t know from what quarter they have called us... We leap to our feet. We leave the captain and the wounded {n their blood; we start up and run away and a race with the shells, | running for our bare, naked Ife. | Butt the shells have the legs of | us. They catch us up from behind tn our backs and wherever the Invisible | sheaf plunges hissing down, men} are falling with {t and rolling helter- | skelter in their blood. But we speed away over twitch- ing and dismembered bodies, turn- ing somersaults, and look n@ther to the right nor to the left. We are on the run and shrink into ourselves as we run. We draw our necks deep between our shoulders, for every man feels that the next moment his head will be leaping out from between his shoulderblades from behind. ee And eves of fron are glaring at us from behind. The swamp! The swamp! The thought suddenly uprears its head in me. We are running blind- ly straight Into the swamp. s * Only another twenty paces now— already the foremost have reached {t—the water spurte up high—ond now—what has happened now? Their feet are atuck fast—they tilt over forwards—they ciaw for something to hold on to—the rifle jflies out of their hand—and face | forward they plunge Into the water and close on our heels they come | rtamping up—the tight packed, mad dened mob. . . “Back! Get back!” But every one has ceased to be conscious of what he ts doing. And though our eyes start ont of onr heads at the terror we see in front of us, death fs breathing its }cold breath into the back of our necks. And into the gurgling water, wriggling with bodies and alive with Inngs, over human bodies writhing beneath the water, death tramples ns to the other bank. Any man who goes down is lost, for théy are pressing on behind us past all holding. The water is already up to our arm pits, But there is a firm bottom be neath our feet. True, the bottom may clutch at us and cling round our feet. True, the water may bite savage- ly at our flesh with teeth and with nails, | PICKING A NEW PRESIDENT ) Seattle ball club,” Dugdale sald to- __'a pitcher, FEDERAL LEAGUE WANTS NAP LAJOIE TO RUN A REBEL CLUB IN CLEVELAND; HE MAY JUMP || The Cleveland Naps may cease negotiations with other clubs in the American league for the #ale or trade of Napoleon Lajole, their veteran second sacker, whose playing 1s on the decline, It ts reported from a reliable #ource that the Federal league is after Lajote, their purpose being to put him in charge of the Oakiand 4%, Portland’ 6. ED PINKMAN Oulmet was among the golfers to terday, after six heats. No War Prices on Goodyear Tires All advances due to doubled cost of rubber are withdrawn today on Goodyear Tires. This applies to dealers and consumers. We have secured from abroad sufficient rubber at former prices to warrant this announcement. Effective everywhere today, Goodyear prices are the same as they were before the war. WHICH WILL YOU TAKE? es At Extra Prices Nowadays, 16 makes of tires are costing more than Goodyear prices. Some makes cost one-third more. One-third more than No-Rim-Cut tires — the world’s top-place tires—the tires that outsell any other. Consider what that means. It means $5 to $15 extra on each tire you buy. It means one-third more tire upkeep — unless they are better tires. It means that three of the extra-price tires cost as much as four No-Rim-Cuts. It means that the same price—or less—would buy a half-inch wider Goodyear. Extra prices are unjust. No man knows of any way to build better tires than Goodyears. We spend $100,000 yearly in our efforts to find a way. In the four ways listed at the right, no other tire equals the Goodyear. Men have bought four million Goodyears. They have tried them out. As a result, they buy more of them than of any other tire. | That any tire can be worth one-third more is simply un- thinkable. (joop AKRON, 2610 No-Rim-Cut Tires With All- Weather Treads or Smooth _ es With Extra Features In No-Rim-Cut tires—at Goodyear prices — we give you these four extra features. Not another tire at any price offers you any one of them. The No-Rim-Cut feature—the one faultless way to end rim-cutting. It completely wipes out the greatest source of tire ruin. Our “On-Air” cure—an extra cure, under road conditions, to save the blow-outs due to wrinkled fabric. This one exclusive process costs us $1,500 per day. Our rubber rivets—formed in each tire by a pat- ent method to combat tread separation. They reduce this danger by 60 per cent. Our All-Weather tread—the tough, double-thick anti-skid. The only anti-skids which run as smoothly as plain treads. The anti-skids with deep, sharp, bull- dog grips. Those are costly features. On their account No- Rim-Cut tires used to be the high-priced tires. ‘ But we gave you the savings due to ~ multiplied output. YEAR . No- Rim-Cut tires “ now cost half the old-time prices. And, with all their exclusive features, they cost you less than 16 other makes. Please find them out. THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY, Akron, Ohio This Company hae no connection whatever with any other rubber concern which uses the Goodyear name Any Dealer can supply you Goodyear Tires. If the wanted size is not in stock he will telephone our Local Branch (1748) IS A WINNER az

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