The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 22, 1914, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

! | cooMBs LIKELY To| | | BE READY FOR BIG | GAMES IN OCTOBER; | TAKING A BIG REST St. Louis Fans Jubilant Over Return of Fielder called upon to face the greatest trio of world ern times in trying to wrest the world’s title from the Athletics. Bender and Plank are showing themselve: ment and the foxy Mack Is nursing Jack Coombs for his turn even when connected with it Refused Stock Gets Big Salary over the al BASEBALL He quit the White Sox partly rity becouse he was unable to ac s. Comiskey declined to part Tomorrow 3 P. M. quire any of the club's stock, | with any of his stoc | and when he quit he was re. Jones then quit, refuring to work | SEATTLE Vs. garded as one of the ablest (for a salary any longer and de leaders baseball ever produced. |manding a share of the profits SPOKANE Jones {# jast 43 years old. He which his management brought) s to the big company, not|through the turnatiles Prices, 28¢, 80c, 75¢, $1 —_—— eee - x TAKE FOURTH AV. CARS aed AN Com ™ " — A. BJ Vancouver ap HPO AB! equal. Consul ; 8 2 4) oe tation Free. ry 4 e@ on @ ef DPR. JOHN 6 ‘ . ‘ 6 ° SORENSEN : 4 ° ' e 815-314 Hitel Bullding. Phone Main seo ' ‘ ° 1 ' 1 revert natant mn rd te ° ian ae ee ° oe t 8 6 SANDERSON’S PILLS : oa 9 28 I. Moat popu orate % 6 6 te 8 al reliable r ARR HF a An R H PO. A BB] se Ss 8 a ae SY ee ae ee ae 425 7808 at he aR 4 8 » a Open eventn: ceive. Bon Sg 2 ae oe RAYMOND REMEDY Co. : J i * ‘ 1 > 0 ' Room 8, TIT) Pike st y e ° ’ : J : ' 1 ° od Et CY he Se ; a Be we eau ~ er ee eas Sea si1eerees* eee eee z Spokane Ooo eeosee 16 oon wi Three-base hit—Huhn. Two-base htt 10 Dance Tickets for 25¢ ff ror base Habe, Zwe-base Me! whece-bese Everyone Welcome playe 1, Spokane 2 Left. on| ome + ee * 8. Spokane 4 Struck out | Otpe vee 2 Rases on balle-Gtpe }t, Noy } | | BULL BROS. ;— x | 2 | IN OTHER LEAGUES | NATIONAL LEAGUE } Just Printers | ec cen cmt Wen tat rt | PR. New York ae 1013 THIRD SAIN 1043) NATIONAL —Cinctnnat! #, New York 2 ee 4 St. Loule 4, Brookiyn 1; Chtcage 7. Brook o Iyn 3, Hoston-Pitteburge game postponed 4 rain. w FEDERAL —Bu: Chteae ate HH Kansas City t 5 “ Bt Loule 4; AMERICAN LEAGUR OHIO METHOD DENTISTRY jz Leet Priteasiphia Portiand . Vashington Ban Francisco . $29 | Detroit Venice ™ at Loute .. Los Angeles ory Racramento “ Oakiand “ 19) Cleveland that ere natural as your Examinations confucted without charge, an4 A wave of horror spread over Faropeas continent when this book, “The the it, the rasping note ) The team that wins the National league pennant probably will be ries pitchers of mod Chief ready for the big engage | Jones to the Big Show a fourth con. P | | secutive National | By Hal Sheridan t 1 to say what was the financial | because he “needs the money,” but} | league pennant. consideration that indaced Jones te because he sees the opportunity to| @ Advices received from St. Louis n the presidency of the North:| fight organized baseball, of which recelved here from St. Louis torn league to join the Federals } indicate the baseball fans of that he was an avowed and open enemy That Jones, formerly manager of Fielder retired from the White] © Chicago White Sox, ani the) Sox at the end of the 1908 season. | « man who ever piloted Comts His team was a contender in 1908) - s elub to & world’s champlon- for American league championship 5 to draw down a princely cal until the last day of the season, DUGDALE PARK is certain. It also ie u pra when they lost to Detroit in the certainty that Jones wae given final game on the Chicago ground cons bie stock In the St. Louia#) With the ald of his brother, Jones wanted to purchase a ta | interest in the Sox. Owner | But curt and sharp, as we knew | torted of command|death grapple * * STAR—SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1914. PAGE 7. M’GRAW WINS PENNANTS BY MAKING GIANTS FIGHT; HAS Pitchers who are carrying famous | | New York Glante | | to Christy Mathewson chances that the Glants will beaten out this year. Holding small love for MeQra By Hugh S. Fullerton Well, {t looks as If we must con- cede it to McGraw, (Business of gracefully conceding.) and -4 Por, unless Roston comes) ploys in winning games, through and holds its terrific gait} cannot help but pull for him ito the finish, there are smalli win bis fourth straight pennant. unnaturally in a life-and-| * with blood Are you not glad? Don’t they | | | THE WEAKEST CLUB IN YEARS lesa for the methods he em- yet one/|ent for rallying his men and mak- us our sweet That the presence of the Federal league is having a deteriorating effect upon major league players, making them lazy and Indifferent as to their jobs, is the contention of several big league managers. Ex perte have figured it that only two teams have had their regular ups In the fleld in 60 per cent of thelr games FEDERAL MAKES LAZY, LEAGUE LEAGUE PLAYERS SAY MAJOR MANAGERS Gil Dobie Declares New Rules Will Have Little Effect on “Grid” Sport line The changes decided upon by the| int rn v the bt intercollegiate football rules com. “8 ' t rcrtmmage on thetr 4#- mittee a few months ago. mS Yb WS IS Ss tien ban age nie wae which become effective the cor ci that tn a aatety t- viny by @ serim- season, are of little Importance Often a player ha cording to Gilmour Dobie, coach of self ¢ sideline i 4 —-Inten- the University of Washington, and r f . ae America’s greatest tutor of the penalised by the loes of 18 gridiron sport The new rule Jeliminate no roughn #, and for! ow ne game ne Marini | that matter lay the man who does The question o the kicking open to more bodily cleared up. The rule jharm than he has ever had to face the loser (meaning the ca al! belong to the aes heretofore jones the tors) must take the kick 9 co whee | “For instance,” says Dobie, “the was interpreted two ways.| new rule permits a player to t as receiving the ball, and the |the kicker as long as he dov other taking {t to kick off. The unintentionally, Last year a player| word ‘make’ has been substituted could only attempt to block the) for ‘tak |ball and had to keep from running Teams will no longer be allowed | be penalized into the player under penalty of los. to make thelr shifts {n front of the . , ing ground. The referee will face | serim line, Hereafter, when Sec 4.—-No person a mighty difficult tagk when he at-\the quarter calls for a s#hif on o walk up and dows tempts to determine the question of | tion the players must move bebind| IL, See. 1.—There the Nn nas the field When a man takes a bunch of in- |.) - ul se py 1) sewing So |e saa ail aestat fertor material, whips It into shape, |)" het on Bina Bowe Baars by, bea ine after a safety or touchback, is abolished, and from now on the ball must be brought out 20 yards holds it together and makes {t play the moat consistent baseball in his league, he deserves something MeGraw hae done tne nine eo (from the goal line and put into| Fa N years, and it looks ax if he is about Sram i MO st Ow |to make it four straight and make YR on. hr pa slight Importance.” The new rules are as follows: a, tee. 3 : Summer Excursion Tickets on | Sale Daily until Sept. 20, 1914, to .. werensone ana | Al principal astern points. |@ record that will not be equaled in many generations of baseball | Always a Weak Club | Take Your Vacation or Business field of play. It He never has had the best ball fe = club in his league—and this year Rule VIL, Seo. 1—The Trip Via has perhaps the weakest he ever he loser must take the kick-off, Ines had, even counting the im oeer must make the kick-oft | provement in the outfield. But he Took peter A 5 see| UN ION PACIFIC SYSTEM to make shifts, Rule XIV. Bee 1 ayer being out of han kept {t playin ball. He hae made it play the most aggressive. [hustling game of any club, has the time the bail 1s put In play forced {ts openings, taken the ex |tra base as often as possible, and | Pate 18. Rule XIX —Penaity |{t has won. ward pass shall be the same McGraw has shown his great sghing @ player who has kicked ness in another way. Study this | >! ] season's dope and you will see that the Giants heve beaten back NORTHWESTERN | each club that bas torestened it. | OREGON SHORT LINE | pitaeere, “atu tae early, tn| LEAGUE and UNION PACIFIC Won. Lost. Pct. grand ear condition and burning . b Vancouver .... 80 611 Going limit 15 days; final retura up the league, The Giants fought s 78; them and pulled them Deak Thos Seattio +« 79 599} / limit October 31, 1914. Liberal Cincinnati bobbed up, and the Gi-|]| Spokane 73 570 }\ Stopovers going and coming. lants withered their aspirations, Tacom: 4 421 I\ Choice of routes for return trip. Then the Cardinals got cheety | Victoria 53 408)) For full information regarding |and full of pennant hopes, and the || Ballard ....... 51 392] fares, tickets, schedules, reserva- hs | tions, apply to J. H, O'NEILL, D. P. A. 716 Second Ave. Tel. Main 982, as ATP’S CAFE Handsomest Cafe in America |Giants licked them. Finally the Cubs came along within striking | @istance of the lead, and the Gi | ants, who had been losing, rallied and shoved them back toward where they belong. be| Now the Braves are full of the| pennant spirit—and they must | beat the Giants to win. We shall | w,| see what happens, | McGraw certainly has shown tal-| Rather hard to keep interest. ed in baseball th: days, eh? if you can you're a real fan. ee Yesterday's Results Seattle 6, Spokane 0; Ballard 4, Vancouver 0; Tacoma 6, Vic- torfa 3, & GLIMPSE AHEAD April 14, 1915—Dog race at Nome, to| ing them fight for the games that leount most ! | | Alaska, This is seasonable. furniture in it !t will be perfect stepped out into the kitchen for a “It ian't every couple who goes|drink of water and stopped to chat |to housekeeping who has an Aunt|a moment with Mollie. When I got This Week | Mary to help them out,” I said to| back I found the chair and papers Dick, and in our case {t ts very/all put back in place, fortunate, as we certainly would| HARRY M. CARTER “Dick, your mother isn’t a good have to wait for years before we! housekeeper because she sacrifices | could get our house furnished prop-| everything to the fetish of order- VIOLA FARRELL © Stnughter House, hilehed. | envy erly. |liness. Her meals may be badly nae Sepemines te 000 canes | Bens Bearater Bown” wae putniene’.| responds! | shot eyes, with foaming, gnashing death? | “Ww aid Dick, as he razed|cooked they always are), but! PERQUITA We Stand Back of Our Work | fires months! in it the author, Witheim| “What the devil's the matter! mouths, they attack and kill one; They have laid us out in a pie-| around, “I suppose this is all right,|every person in tha house mut be Other Acts / for 12 Years’ Guarantee. _| Lamemns,,» German nigh school toaches.| with yout Pull yourse’? together. | another, and try to mangle one an-|turesque row, and you need only|for you certainly did make the| prompily om thme to ont them Bre And 8 er ‘ Set of Teeth om the batth with modern machine| Can't you hear? Get back to your|other. * * * {| leap to my feet./turn your head to rub amainst | rooms at the hotel look pretty after|qoes not go ahead and serve her l’S BAND $25 8 june and war appliances, Men go out to| piace at once * * * | must get away, to escape human flesh at once, and {if you/you got used to them. But just| meal. but ostentatiously waits for) MARACC Guaranteed ........ — “MACHINES Nation ot] ,But then It burst out, the voice | from myself, or in another minute turn your yellow eyeball, you can|now, Margie, you have seemed to|the inissing one and makes every-| $15 det. of Teeth $5 of Nature, and resounds so harsh-| 1 anal be In the thick of this mad- see nothing but corpses in the twi-| take all the ‘pep’ out of these rooms | jody else miserable while doing tt | Never a Dull Moment } and tears down all barriers. dened, deathdoomed mob. * * * light. they are not alive.” “ . ate ane seeeeees Murderers!"’ roars a biasphem-|I stumble over the riflepite. ® * *| One beside the other—that Is] “Leave it to me, dear boy, and|asxeq Dick wim ace” “In the Heart of the or | Sattiofietds te graphie-| °U8 mouth. “Murderers of men! race out into the night, and tread | how the are sleeping. Tl venture you will like Our) ing, . . eo 9P $10 Porcelain Crown. .. .Q4P| Sir deserived In this story, the rights to| We shall have to knock them allon|on quaking flesh * * * step on| And corpse upon corpse, ever|house quite as well aa you dié“our Pg IB er hederAgie ~ gayd City’ . | Shick hate been Durchased by The Mar |the head like dogs hard heads, and stumble over!more of them through the whole! rooma at the hotel.’ 2 1S Ses: eee Sone eee 10 Gold or Porcelain @4) _—— We all start as if under an elec-| weapons and helmets * * * some-|iength of the loose soll of the| “You are not going to make it so| "learn. oF ; \f J. I. Johnson, Gen. Mgr. Bridge Work....... (Master of a Large Public School|tric shock * * * that was what thing is clutching at my foot lke |potatofield, and we even fill the dainty that I cannot smoke here. denmmuhi" tetetek wae dis E. G. Wood, Amnt. Mgr. 1 illi e | in Germany) was on the tip of the tongues of| hands, so that I race away like © whole adjoining field of roots. |Margie?” Dick asked, somewhat > Solid Goid Fillings. $1 pel all of us * * © that was the cli-| hunted deer with the hounds at {t#| We poor deal heroes! | chapne-teeed. | Cle-Re-Contiones: Moatays) Other Fillings Office hours, 8:30 to 6. By Wilhelm Lamszus we cannot endure to go on lyti bidders or #0 on lying ‘The laugh is full of horror, and| from the very start * * * and| Something trickles oddly across} for millions of our brothers. i ti if | mingles with the dying whine be-jnow * * * it is like a shadow | my hand—something ike warm) Our wives have land, our chil ut- e eNntists lyond. © * © Fae et aay ee ee ne eet ee a a irae ny hand $0 | Gren, our mothers, our futher ts | ghostly kinematograph ny eyes is red and molst | jand 207 UNIVERSITY STREET. | The laugh grows ever louder, | tinct the militia-map hae drawn|*® © ° blood ts flowing over my }and ever wilder, and laughs in tri }umph at the naked, Mttering the ground. | “Drummers! Strike up!” shouts} the votce. | “Unoover for prayer!” his bayonet * * ° standing facing the captain CORNER SECOND AVENUE. pitiful dying | he him Asthma! 1 do not know where | am. honette against the pale sky, and| | see wild beasts spreads out his arma in blessing | Asthma! asthma in any form, it will darkness. “In the name of the pay you to investigate. I have ||| Father, and of the Son, and of the hnings and cured asthma of 30 years’ Holy Ghost | nde standing, not in joston and Then arms seize him from be-| New York, but here in Seattle hind and pull him down pep attle, and |]| they drag him to the ground and towns aroun raging body until at length breath | fails him * * * they have tied him hand and foot, and have gag-| can’t sleep nights, I will give relief at once and a cure in time The following diseases Anything Delivered Anywhere. bound to happen Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh And when the of the Bladder, Prostatitis in voice calls out it Olympic View Sanitarium, tanding facing gesticulating at him 14-16 W. Harrison ” ‘torn to pleces there max that was bound to come * * ¢ his re-| it, the white thing under me ts not volver in his hand, and gives him| a heap of sand. I an order * * * he promptly gots | sitting on a corpse * * a blow with the butt end of the| stricken, J rush about * 1! round me dis-| night, and |, only over the sick night * * * he ios - stands there like a rapt priest, and St.Paul Stove Repair !f you are a sufferer from raves, and is blessing the gled & Plumbing (0. Ortgtfiat fire back repatra) I have not faile in one of Our Father” he howls aloud, and them. Now, if you are a suf. strikes and kicks out round | — ee, re ed ferer from this disease and him, and goes on praying from his Phone Queen Anne 3127 re willed. human beings you've |f Second and Spring Third Floor heels * * * and ever more bodies in| —breathless—out of one field into any longer 2 (COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY THE/this charnal-house any longer. ***| another. * * * Horror ia crooning We had to die to enable the oth 9 to 12. FREDERIC A. STOKES CO.) “You mind what you're about."|over my head * * * horror 1s | ors to live. The other's wrath breaks out| crooning beneath my feet * * *| We died for our native land in | CHAPTER X. Jonce more * * * and then we|and nothing but dying, mangled jt» straits, Be ‘ ’ ” know it for certain, the captain is|flesh * * * | We are victorious now, and ha’ | “Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha a tool * * * he has lost the game 4.9% won land and fame, And now our poor native land hi air to breathe. | be stifled, is| white hand * * © then I realize see | They have got rid of us, of us wi were far too many. | have escaped the slaughter house. . And it comes over me as a great | thing, a pathetically great thing— now I know what my destiny is— of lowering, I watch my own actions, ndjand wait to see how I shall accom- putting my hand into my poc! | before I left home I took my pock- | COMFORT WILL BE MY WATC jus dream of nothing but our Cou try's Future, . (The End.) | et-pistol with me. | Lam holding the toy in my hand | the steel is looking up at me and blinking at me—1 am gazing with a into its black, confiding ne tar Ash nad ben? 4.4 mu 1am holding {t against my ag Pm tant Mri isa he’ 7 AUTO DELIVERY CO. tempie—t pull the trigger and fail worRD its forms, such as Tonsilitis, But now the Thing-that-Couldn’t | none stoce 264 oe 6 «eg over backward-the last of man-| (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Adenolds, Gastric Uleer of the happens—that none the leas was - ‘Bi kind on this dead earth! Enterprise Assoclation.) They have now covered hot breath with earth, up our ated. the Lundberg Truss, trial to prove it ‘A, LUNDBERG CO. teh Detormity Appliances and and give tree) aoors, | paper” with conventional brownt green trees wo get Aunt ‘al Limbs, Artif . 1107 THIRD AVENUE, ° Mary's ~mahogai S80 do not disturb our last sleep Jand enough It need no longer They have cleared the air of us. |us sleep upon our laurels, and let The little apartment is all decor- Above this I have put a “forest It is lovely, and when “I certainly am not,” I answered! jemphatically; “in our house neither you norlare golng to be tyrannized over by things. Comfort is going to be concidered first of all in this place. I will never forget the first Sunday I spent at your mother's house after we were married. I | had drawn that reclining chair out of the dark corner and set it by the window, placed at the proper angle and put all the Sunday news-| papers beside me on the floor. I LEARN TO PLAY Any one wishing to learn the game of Pocket Billiards will get a world of Information by attending the games played by experts every afternoon at 2:15 and every evening at 7:30 At the White House Billiard Parlors In the Joshua Green Building, Fourth and Pike. An academy with seating capacity for 300 people has been built to accommodate the public. ve, ve | Unreachable Neighbors ‘ho | rifle on his head that fells him to| one is lying over there, too * * *| , We recognize him; he !s & fe|t.6°sxound without a sound © ® *|and there, and there! * © © Me ea! py Ao art se servist belonging to some ploUs\ang they leap up from all the|ciful Ged! 1 it plainly now: | mouths. We are so full-fed, so full- W H h th h ° 7A sergeant has setzed im, and | Tenet ots “inoy ery, “Mur-|the human rece died oul tnle very | 4, 884 aulet O neighbors on the same street who are ltries to hold him * * * the cap-| 4.0 lr Pome 7 alent © 6. 8 toe She | But they have got land! And . Bronchial [tain has run up, but the madman | **"er® ill: thom! wie ¥ ss Ue te gre! iron mines! “Gold! Spices not connected with the same telephone sys- tears himself away and runs ahead) tiene ig no stopping It now.| the woods dead—the villages " . ., Of them to a riflepit * * * hel. T"ST reei {hava gone thad. ©*'s| the cittes deadethe. Earth te|, Come Drother philosopher: let ua tem are practically far apart. stands aloft, a black, wild sil- * © *|dead—the Earth was butchered to- ~ “mire mn: The telephone users in the community who can be reached by one are inacessable to the other. To reach them all means the inconvenience and added expense of two telephones. A community gets the best service from one good telephone system which is linked up by toll and long distance lines with the rest of the country. o Ane { le ver me aa if I had lived it Why are you blinking at mo with on, tt Ped nye ge |e pnb ok odie a a | your bleared eyes, my brother? Sing nad Dick to go out there 3, eC ” @ ard, | — = th me last evening. forms; all Nervous Diseases, ‘Captain shouts the hard. w 1 ‘ 5 : Epilepsy, Heart and Kezema, || naked, impudent volee we all I could see he was very much Every Bel Tele hone Is a Long Distance tation and many others too numer know. “Haven't you got any cot disappointed with the scheme of ous to mention. If you are in ton wool for us to plug our ears | | decoration. : ite apd I will give th?” ton. : gs Pathe and addresses of Hl tie have alj turned round as if|] That Seattic has the finest |! nlgwever: he did wake up not mee cure a 20} A billlard parlor in the world? }) J ‘oom, cyl dll cache one wore Se cone wonderful white enameled wains- 7 okel, Cc i ind ! ‘ains. 1s i the + Pia page Uap ry scenes r |. We guarantee the superiority of|coting with mahogany trim and e acl Cc e e one Ae CEGaAS Os ra ah . & Telegraph Company ny

Other pages from this issue: