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JOHNNY KILBAN BY ABE YANKEE BOSS PULLED GOOD ONE ON P.L. Manager Frank ‘Chance of the New York Highland. ers now says he's glad Ray Caldwell, the Buffalo left his team. “Caldwell is a fairly good who jumped to Federals, hae pitcher,” sald Chances, “but one of the hardest men in baseball to handle.” Other members of the Yankee team say that as fast as Chance slapped fines on Caldwell, Owner Farrel! was slipping Ray the money to pay the fines, Caldwell signed a con tract with the Buffalo Fed- orale several weeks ago. It was sald the club gave him $5,000 as a bonus, The Lucky Birds! The bine grouse season opens September 14, and not Sept 1, as fs the general impression among the hunters fn this state, State Game Warden Darwin made this announcement Monday night. DUGDALE FIELD BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 VANCOUVER VS. BALLARD Admission 250, 50c, 73 and $1.00 ‘Take Fourth Ave. Care |into first division by a spectacular spurt, and this season he has = || When you invest in real ed 6 , Beattio— PO. ADR HPO A BE ‘ ee WE et — by an unprecedented climb from last to second place tn ee oe ° re dere ac eet estate, and you will have i Slee ee 1 ag gd H 4 6 i 3 8 Sif not only our careful ex- Go East Now STALLINGS’ PERSONALITY HAS MUCH TO DO WITH IT. HE Hubn ¢ Williams, 1b -# 9 132 1 611 amination of the title, | ie a giant, 6 feet 3 inches, 215 Ibs, has a magnific: 4, a handsome " ne sor Leg Md ET Ger Sa) dae ey | hut. bak aiveenient tou Summer Excur@n Tickets on| {¢, & sraceful, easy carriage and the most wonderful set of teeth in ; acern ie le ee aS 18 J £ Sale Daily until Sept. 30, 1914, to | the world. 1 +4 0 1 &# © oOjf fend the title at our own - an principal Eastern points. | Off the field, Stallings {s quiet, restrained and masterful. 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Saturday evenings, 7:30 to 9% FORCED TO TAKE THE TRAIL USED ATTELL E| Following hie bout on Labor day wit ba j Mer titleholder, Abe Attell, by seeking ranka, Attell, the class of the feather | Hightwelghts because of the lack of “feath | le about 128 pounds, dall tear Branch Rickey | the greatest of these {s Stallings Tho astonishing improvement tn the tatl- deen due almost entirely to the selection of | for the material with which they have worked | the lasg ten years. Broadway, the city’s largest high| October 3, Broadway vs. West Court calendars and | Counting the Federal league, Bill Phillips, Joe Tinker and Otto school, and West Seattle, the small-| Seattle mer ‘ | ‘oo » © J . “ reports are clogged with | Knabe must be added to the list of men who have proved themselves est institution of the Seattle dis. October 10, LAncoln va. Franklin; ] po! eh aft det — capable and effictent in the handling of men and fn directing and lead rict, open the season on the afore-| Queen Anne vs. Ballard i itigation atlecting ing them in games, said date, Similar preliminary) October 16, Queen Anne vs, West estate titles see ee | games will be played, and not until | Seattle YET a majority of all | ONE DAY LAST SEASON AN OWNER WAS COMPLAINING OF October 24, the date set for a clash| October 17, Broadway vs. Ballard tl ttacked i suc- his manager. 1 offered to name for him six men who could take his between Broadway and Queen Anne,| October 23, Lincoln vs. West Be titles attacked are } club and make a winner of it, provided he would let them do it, The will the by battle be on attle cessfully defended | men I named were James Tilden Sheckard, now manager of the Cleve While the schol board had made| October 24, Ballard vs. Franklin; BUT in success there land association team; Jack Hendricks, man | association; Jesse Burkett, Fielder Jones, Herzog, then a private. who today Is the joke of the league. | The only manager who has fooled me thi | I expected him to make a frightful splash of he has done wonderfully well "eee BUT STALLINGS IS THE BIG NOIS: | Stallings must have been chuckling, when manager at Detroft, for while President Johnson was reading him out of baseball he had a contract team, pushed ft up to second place, stuck tn the fight to near the finish and finally finished fifth, Then two signal tipping scandals tn snoces-| | | Already signed to lead the Yankees in 1909 } sion put him bad again. Chase put him tn | his contract he retired and went to Buffalo. | Bos | Dench, he ts a maniac, raving, abusing, threa io and the minute it ts over he puts an arm roasted hardest and tells him how he was pulling for him. In private life Stallings is — planter. few miles out of Macon, Ga, where his team trains, THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE EVEN AUNT MARY (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper 5 ype ty bint hy nan — MINNEAPOLIS, Ang. 25.—The Enterprise Association) am very sorry for a, Western open golf tournament Important bt te 1 ore wummary—7 rene a It seems as though there is some reo aid Fence lard food foe she | opened today. H. G. Legg and Otis cone ep at ibe ayant muntnis of Cg ea a thing that {s trying to keep us| "AE very few thine to enjoy ator | forse, won first prise money in the Northwest Soccer Football as-| Cha e sew epere-lane tn. a wet cas paneary pleas. |e Sehole preliminary event Mon- |goctation Wednesday night, Appli from getting Into our and she cuts off our sensory pleas | day. jeations for membership will be| ture: ment. Aunt Mary was taken with ne @ case of rheumatism Inst week and the doctor told her that noth- ing would do her as much good as mud baths. So, after I had put all the furniture {n the rooms, I came down here with her. | It was fortunate that going out of town just at this time. Do you know, little book, I am | quite sure that Dick really made an important business engagement at this time when he knew we would be all torn up with settling. Men hate disorder and I really don't blame them. They never can see that order will come out of/ the chaos of piled up furniture, pio tures in the kitchen and the best china tm the living room where the movers have placed them, regard- less of your direction. I could see that Annt Mary was perfectly ter ror stricken by having to go alone, Aunt M: Ing: | individual Dick was | ot tell bi talk abou same old your Unc “There ever: W is changt “I feel, with her. I really think a sanitartum ts « more unpleasant place than a how pital, There are so many people who are fighting grimly against pain and death, and you can see while, for a time, they may over- come pain, the battle will go at last to the awful shape that seems to be standing in wait just behind And the worst of it {s that one sees }so0 many young people who are ertppled and worn-—their racked faces have lost the look of youth, which is the look of hope. “Much of the horror of rheuma- tism can be removed,” one of the doctors told me, “if one’s teeth, nose and throat are kept clean and | free from infection.” book, that thought trying to with him him. I must of view o That is a simple and easy pre- vention of terribly painful dis- (To Be ease and I am going to take it to heart and remember it, as I have la bad throat and tonsils. Add ho The doctor tells me that Aunt | champion Mary has rheumatoid arthritis— Mercy, what a name! It is brought lon often by the hardening of the arteries, He recommends a very \slim diet for this and says Aunt Chicago. prastios to chronto and nervous diseases of man and women, much os 1 ments of the LIVER, sTOMACH, BOWELS, KIDNEYS, BLADDUR, SKIN, BLOOD, PILES, VARI- COS VEING, ULCERS, MTC. LEARN TO get a world of Information by attending experts every afternoon at 2:15 and every e in the Joshua Green Bullding, Fourth ani An academy with the featherweight champion, will follow the footstepe of the for: | Boston Pilot Is |[teabers wo wave mape coop] a Raving Maniac — a on Ball Diamond By Hugh S. Fullerton Thie year of 1914 bas brought to the front three managers of base- Charlle Herzog and Georgo Stallings Kid Gleason and Charile Ho passed them all by and chose a go-between Stallings came back to the majors to take the hopeless, tatlend ton Braves. Last year he atartied the league by leading the team tening, storming at every z ay “eee Se 8 2 around the fellow he has nT tai 8 Sb. nt moe. 2 wi] to save you from loss i AD. RH. PO. A B So 2 Bae the title fails. He owns a big plantation a Be ae Be ee 2 0 ba a 1 ? ’ 1 ° & 1 1 2 ° t ie We fe are f H oe oe ie oe No Ab ; 1 ’ 1 1 | Miester, tb J o ° 2 » 1 1 1 1 e Seraen, 6 ° i 2 5 oO ) rac e 1 e ‘ 1 heek, © ‘ ° 1 ‘ 5 He 1 Ft eee Boece. Required shows ‘1 0a @ on: Sak a a Melienry, » e e . e ° eo 4 i. Totals .... t : ‘4 Bal rd 000010006 0-1 +} HAS THE FEVER left today for Japan for a three! , Score é4] Beets Dict oie ae Tourney Opens rons ten. ir they cant ‘play |Site a Stl alt eet ea ean mae ee | ike ball over in Nippon land, the local| Two-ba. | Salveson i, Mont % I suppose ft i# then that one be gins to live tn the past and to play the part of the lookeron. “You know, Margie, my real sometimes when you young people some time hence. | Mary and Jack and you and Dick| and I see you are confronting the} and more about what is required| of her and how much of {t she is in duty bound to accomplish. | 8 period of great unrest and unhap. piness before you come ito accord, - — _———____—— ~ so Dick and I a ne 8 go “Up until now woman has been | SSS Eee —— ——— —— me nothing to do but for me to 69) 4. adjunct of man, and it will take | ————— Se i quite a while for him to got used to the real partnership and under-| standing that is word ‘accord.’” Goodnes know Aunt Mary s0 well, carried along by this wave of fem- iniam that we younger women are/ have been a time when, with even as perfect a husband as Aunt Mary thinks Uncle John was, she would have liked to have been tn “accord” | think it will give him a new point tant suffrageting.” halr mussed. TATE’S Handsomest Cafe in America HARRY M. CARTER VIOLA FARRELL And 8 Other Acts MARACCI’S BAND Never a Dull Moment “In the Heart of the I. Johnson, Gen, Mgr. Any one wishing to learn the game of Pocket Billlarde will At the White House Billiard Parlors iting capacity for 300 people has been STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1914, PAGE 7, PORT BIG LEAGUE UMP FINDS IT A PIPE TO SELL THE FANS | LIFE INSURANCE| “[ ue umpire, peddies Insurances during | the winter, H ye the fact ti le an umpire ma his path much rosier than that of the ordinary Insurance agent. The only objection Slik has is the fact that nearly every time he gete ready to sell a man| Insurance, his vietim usually wants to “fan” with him In hopes of get | ting a line on inside baseball stuff. | h Johnny Dundee, Johnny Kil. | Bilk O'Loughlin, the big | game among the lightweight! division, was forced to fight} ny Kilbane's natural weight Local Schools to Begin Football Season October 3 The high school football season {scheduled games with out-of-town opens in Seattie on Thursday, Octo-| teams, they were allowed to follow | ber 3, This is the date which has| their schedule. been fixed by the committee of high| ‘The new order eliminates Seattle schol coaches and principlals, who|as a contender for the state inter-| have had charge of drawing up the| scholastic title. | schedule for the season. The schedule follows: | A Good Title Is Often Attacked and pnd teams this season has brainy, capable managers, 1 is poorer than tn any of hager of the Indianapolis Broadway ve, Queen Anne. October 30, Franklin vs. Seattle. October 31, Lincoln vs. Balfiird. November 7, Lincoln ve. Queen Anne; Broadway vs, Franklin. ywember 13, Ballard va. West Seattle. November 20, Franklin vs. Queen arrangements for putting the Wash ington park grounds into shape for the coming season, the work has progressed but little, and the coaches are fearful that the schools will be without grounds upon which to play unless more speed in made. This is the first year the ban placed upon intercity games will be enforced, The board reached this | Anne. decision during last season, but as| November 21, Broadway vs. Lin- a number of the teams had already | colin. is defeat—the costs of suit, attorneys’ fees, etc. West is season ts Bill Carrigan. it and am rejotcing that Demand Title Insurance — OF THE SEASON. Stallings stiffened the worse, and at the end of) Aggregation may go to war. / veson 1, Hunt & Washington by one until none ts left. Insurance considered. NATIONAL LEAGUE a. et. | ” Lovie Chtoago ...- Phtindelphta a 6. FEDERAL—Brookiyn ¢-1, Indtanapotie| 1-6. NORT! ary sald to me this morn- The Seattle Nippona, a Jap | Spel iN—Seattie 7, Victoria life is over and you can-|team, accompanied by G ‘Tacoma 427 | Cinet $; Vancouver 4, Ballard 1; Taco: y | » i J00TKS | o * J é me, 10, ow queer it seems to me Vievort sos | Pes Spokane 9. j | Engel, a well-known baseball man, | pai 261) Be COAST—No games scheduled A Writing Set to Every schoolgirl and Schoolboy t what you Intend to do| I have watched | problems that confronted | le John and me. | is this difference, how-| ‘oman’s place in the world ing—she is thinking more dear, that there will be) young people | meant by that I am sure, Iittle| t not even you, who must never she, too, was being that surmount, There must! instead of an “adunct” to read this to Dick. 1 ft what he calla my “mill Continued Tomorrow.) | rrors of war. The roque hips are being played in Two contestants got their CAFE Exact elze of the above cut, In a handsome and durable Linen Covered Case, This set will fill all your requirements for the whole school year. Start to school with one of these fine writing sets. One to every girl and boy for tuy ing in the names and addresses of two people who are not subscribers to The Star, who would like to take it for one month‘or longer. ‘ All you have to do is have these two coupons signed, bring them to The Star office and receive the set. HERE IS WHAT YOU GET 1 Large Combination Pencil, With Coupling Containing One Yellow Pencil and One Black Pencil, Perfection School Pen. 1 Torpedo-Shaped Pen Holder. This Week PERQUITA 1 Large Desk Eraser, 1 Octagon Pencil With Eraser, 2 Round Medium Pencils With Erasers. City” Seattle Star, Seattle Wash, You may have your carrier deliver The Seattle Star to me. for one month, and thereafter until I order it stopped, for which I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 25c per month. (If you are now a sub- scriber to The Star, do not sign this coupon, as you will only cause the Girl or Boy who took your signature to be disappointed.) © Seattle Star, Seattle Wash. You may have your carrier deliver The Seattle Star to me for one month, and thereafter until I order it stopped, for which I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 25¢ per month. (If you are now a sub- scriber to The Star, do not sign this coupon, as you will only cause the Girl or Boy who took your signature to be disappointed.) | Wood, Amnt. Mgr. PLAY Name Oooo one woe eee cee oer eins ees Senet rt the games played by vening at 7:30 Address PSII io eins nifinis «needs d inwstegicmey sata ya id Pike, Phone Number ...... Phone Number: ..5s\.tieaneswas evs