The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 11, 1914, Page 11

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, runs @ © the aunt topsy- jen 3 p saw tt as mm her a ere TAKES 4TH N. W. FLAG The Northwestern league has Practically reached its terminatio although three days still remain on the schedule, The contest for first place between Vancouver and Seat- tle came to a close Thursday. ‘s chances for the upper jeated through a t administered by the Spkane Indians, ed the Bees. Seattle has three more games to play, against the Beavers’ five. The Giants could win all three, and the) Heavers drop every one of the five, ed the Canucks would still matin P: in a lead of one point. (rm clinching this year’s pennant, @ Heavers have brought a total of four pennants to Vancouver, Van couver also won the championship in 1908, 1911 and 1918. This gives the Beavers a lead of two pennants in the number captured by other cities, Spokane is securely hooked to third place, and the Bees are an echored in fourth. There etill re- mains_a slight probability that the Colts will dislodge the Tigers from | fifth place. The Shingleweavers would have to take all the rest of the games to do it Last year's race ended with the teams in the following order: Van- conver, Portland, Seattle, Victoria, Tacoma and Spokane. DUGDALE FIELD BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 TACOMA VS. BALLARD Admission 250, 0c, Te and $1.00 Take Fourth Aye. Cars You Will Find Just the Pattern to Please You at CRATON'S Our fall showing of the finest materials and hand- somest patterns the mar- ket offers now awaits your inspection. Vancouver down.) ICHARD NORRIS WIL- I; LIAMS 2nd and Maurice E. McLoughlin Is the tennis team that has been | named for the Amerioan chal players throughout the coun- try will soon be rated. There le @ probabiiity that both play. ers will be bracketed as No, 1, the firet time euch a@ thing wae ever done. eee Replying to the recent report that an effort was to be made to bring about affiliation of the ma- jors and the Federal league, Pres! |dent Tener of the National league, | declares that organized ball [doesn’t intend to make peace with the Feds, nor ever will see are the firet team the Giants in a final dash for the pennant since 1908, when the Cubs overhauled them shortly after the historical Merkle affair and the appearance of Coveleskie ae a real foe at Philadelphia. During that race the Giants were nabbed late in September, though they did not know ft until the end of the season, when the disputed game was ordered played off to decide the tle. eee FIELDER JONES ought to make a better bench manager than he jwas a playing manag it tan't #0 far from the bench to ump as it was from center field, ee Those Athietice are the only team in the world that can lose two games in one September aft ernoon and go off the field whis thing. eee ‘There’s one thing we should be| thankful for: the baseball mag-/ nates will not talk half as mac this winter; with wine at $10 a quart. eee | CYCLONE JOHNNY THOMP. SON MUST BE AFTER A| STEADY JOB FIGHTING BAT) LEVINGKY. eee When you applaud a ball player who has just made a great catch and yell “Good boy, Jones,” maybe you are applauding « man named Bascom. There are now 32 play- ers tn the major and minor leagues known to be playing under as- sumed names. How many others are using nom de bats ts hard to Many of them boys who started professional ¢ reers under false names, and kept h | Bit STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 11, 1914. FORMER U.W. ATHLETE IS OFF TO WAR Aimar — AusiawTurenne, well known as a former member of the| | University of Washington, where he attended two years ago, ls one jof the many athletes of the world them after becoming well known. | who has gone off to the battle The principal reason for the|ffont, News that AustasTurenne changes of name is family objec-|Nas left for the seat of hontilitios tions to baseball as a profession with his troop, a Canadian artil lery company, has beon received by his Seattle friends, The ath lete Joined the company in Montre. al, where he had been spending the summer on the estate of Louis Beaublein, his — multt-millionaire grandfather. Avaite-Turenne aid not return to Washington Inst year, taking up his studies at Harvard, He wae a splendid athlete and gathered many points for the U, of W. while taking part in various Northwest Intercollegiate meets, In addition to the more strenuous line of ath letics which he pursued, he was a tennis player of considerable ability Aimar t® the NELSON NOReR! University of Chicag player and_ athlete, FORMER ar football has assumed son of Raymond Ausins-Turenne, president of the Yukon Investment Co, and vice president of the Bank for Savings of Seattle. Hefore enrolling at Washington, he attended the Seat tle college LEJEUNE IS SOLD SIOUX CITY, Ia., Sept, 11-—HMar ty Lejeune, outfielder, who is lead. ing batter in the Western league, and star member of the local team has been sold to the Pittsburg Na tlonals. charge as coach of the State Uni versity of Utah football team Norgren reports a strong lot of ma- terial at the Salt Lake school and expects to develop a team that can invade the conference circuit next year. Frank Vance, 8. A. C. athletic director, will take a team of six boxers to Walla Walla September 17-19. Those selected to make the trip are, Phelps, Baird, Sontag, Gleason, Harris and Charb. Record Lowered WOODLAND, Cal, Sept. Stepping the mile tn 2:01 Logan, son of Charles Derby, the pacing record of the ‘Thursday. Those Boston hurlers are earn- ing their pay all right. For Bill James, 4 day rest, and out he goes again. Day defore yesterday | was dispatched against the! Giants, and the whaled the} tar out of the Gothamites. Now,/ on the strength of that alone, Bill) was entitled to a three or four day rest. One day passes, and zip! there’s Bill again. He op- posed the Phillies in the second game of a double-header Thursday The Braves won, 7 to 2. James held Philadelphia to six hits, 788 The home of C Charley Abbey, for mer ball player, at 346 Seventh av. N, was entered by burglars last A quantity of valuable jew- elry was taken if the Colte and Tigers had out out the practice throws between rape yesterday they could have GRIFF IS CHAMP finished the seme in less than three-quarters of an hour, The) p ST Ghee Getae wider es players hustied on and off the | 57.49, 6.1, GC. L. Griffin, California, 1, but the pitcher had to have/t; 's. clay court champion, won the his five lobs at the start of every | Green Lakes lawn tennis champion. stanza. jehip here Thursday. HE HOGS ’EM ALL| | HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 11.- PICK FIGHT TEAM| /PLAYER PLUCKED, NORTHWEST ‘TEAMS HANG UP A RECORD A now Northwestern league rec ord for quick games was establish led on Dugdale field Thursday after. hoon, when the Tacoma Tigers and Ballard Colts tore off eight and a half innings In exactly one hour and | |three minutes. The players tuned up the day before, when a full nir |inning game was played tn an hour and ten minutes ‘There ts little question but what this is @ league record, An exam! nation of the statiatica failed to re veal a faster game. As few of the Northwestern records available are entirely complete, it may develop later that a record was not shatter. ed. None of the old-timers can re member a quicker contest here. Had the two teams out out the dilly-dallying between innings, there is lite question but what a | mark would have been hung up that | has been equaled fow times in the | history of the national pastime. The fastest game recorded was played in 31 minutes, | _ The game was splendidly played, the feature being the tight pitching |Fans who have turned out the past | two days are agreed that both con tosts wore the best-played games of} the year on the Seattle lot. FEDS GET BUSY SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 11.—Ad vices from Chicago say the Federal league has laid plans to grab sev eral star Coast league players be fore the drafting seasc.’ opens, Sep-| tember 15. O’LEARY RESTS VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. L1.— Johnny O'Leary and Sally Salvadore are resting today, awaiting the gong that sends them together over the 16-round route at Brighouse Satur- day afternoon, CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE (Ongyrighs, 1914, ty the Newspaper Ba: COMING BACK 1 TO HER MAN “Do ye mind if 1 go home for + Dit ave a while tonight, Miss Mar garet?” Annie asked me yosterda: “Certainly not, Annie. You get your things packed up and fn send for them tomorrow.” Annie hesitated « mo: then sald: “Shure, swate ave ye, Mits Margaret. Just take the back dure ka: ean get in at any time.” “Do just as you Itke, Annie,” jeald. I don't know when she go In, but this morning her eyes wer: all red and swollen. She looked Those Who Know and Don't Know Those Who Those who know—know. They know in Regal $15 Clothes they are getting satisfaction, style and tailor work of the very finest kind. They also know that our clothes wear—that they never felt more comfortable in a suit or overcoat, and that when they came to buy new Regal $15 Clothes, the last ones they bought here needed nothing more than a good press- ing; it takes several seasons to wear out one of our Regal $15 Suits or Overcoats. Those who don’t know belong to that class who are too “busy” to investigate. They haven’t time to make com- parisons and prove that Regal $15 Clothes are as good, if not better, than $20 or $25 clothes to be had anywhere else in Seattle. Investigate—compare. That is a test—and it is a test that will save you many dollars. It will make you a better dressed man—it will make you a more economical man— it will make you a more satisfied man Comparison and investigation are easy—and it is well worth your time. 615-17-19 FIRST AVE. The Big Store With the Little Rent On the Square Opposite Totem Pole. Visit our new, daylight, low rent, Upstairs Clothes Shop GIRL ABDUCTED BY MODERN CAVE MAN; . HAS HIM ARRESTED, SHE THEN REPENTS Declares Now She Can’t Help But ps Anybody Who Thinks So Scenic Cafe FIRST AND STEWART A Place to Eat O10 METHOD IN DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replaced by fhe Ohio Method by artificial teeth are natural as your original . Examinations are now be- ing conducted without charge, and estimates are furnished in all cases. We Stand Back of Our Work for 12 Years’ Guarantee. $25 Set of Teeth Guaranteed 15 Set of Teeth ranteed 1.0 Solid Gold or orcelain Crown ...... $4 10 Gold or Porcelain ridge Work ......... $4 Solid Gold Fillings ....$1 Up Other Fillings .. gOttice hours, ps bg # 6. £ OHIO Cut-Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY STREET " CORNER SECOND AVENUE Phone that Rent Ad Sundays, i denenimanie | Wagner. . | Lewis, if ol awcHconuntis | eweceunnnnil lenenwunee Bue » bases—Swain, Hub. }—Spokane 2, Seattle Covaleakie 4, Bonner 5 | Covelesicte 2, Seattle 9, Spo! | Ballard . NATIONAL LEAGUE Won. Cincinnati AMERICAN Philadelphia Boston | Washington | Detroit Chicago |New York weaneower Dowucccrwerh Lost 3 eee a1 ccccsccce? Leonard, p Petal «2... rack out—| Bases on ball What You Want to Know: CAN YOU BE CURED? HOW LONG WILL IT TAKE? WILL IT BE PERMANENT? WHAT WILL IT COsT? A Visit Wil Tell. Call Today My, Are Entirely Private REE my practioe to ehrante nd | Driving trotters and pacers, Tommy |"* though she had been erring for a ee took ail four events Thurs-| hours, The toast was burned, thc day, the final day of the Grand Cir egg weak, and I could see that 50 CENTS Boys’, Girts’ and Children’s HATS KAVANAGH'’S First and Union, cult racing meet h Dick wns rather disgusted with “ the breakfast, although he said BIG BALL SERIES |"™*«. morrow morning and getting the CHICAGO, Sept. 11.-—The Nation-| Petrnat myacif, larranging games between teams tn : Sees aaale wring a6 the | Ohio, Missourl, Nebraska and Min- |nesota to decide the championship] ¢7e#,and the plates alternately with ‘owe! ‘What is the matter, Annie?” N. W. MAN HIGH [wnat ao ye suppone that, that spal ria peen of a Pat has done? Nothin DAYTON, ©. Sept. 11-—8. A.lelse but getting into a fight and among the three marksmen who/ he'll never get onthe police force scored 57 out of 60 in yesterday's! Ang ‘tis sald, Miss Margaret, that events of the grand handicap trap-|he hit the man that had him ar | was going to lave him. | “Pat said I'd never do that ‘to |the man that loved me,’ and he let But you are going to leave bim t you, Annie? What! Lave the man that| 1006 Viret, at Madison jsint up for it all for me? I didn't] jthink, Miss Margi ye'd ask me Free Admi to do that.” EA |thing of the kind, but 1 thought AT DREAMLAND you told me you were going to do Ay Everyone Welcome §}| me—but {t's mesilf that'll mate him | at the dure ave the jail and mak« VEYOUR MONEY ""i:."sce0'T i Tt but ye may well say that a woman can not lave her man who fighte} on. ©. T. KNOWLTON in Chorge |¢0 kape her good name. It’s mesil{) t sive any. RO Wy. jan’ ye're cleanin’, but I guess that| I shall begin by getting up to al Amateur Baseball association is washed the dishes and wiping her lof the United States. “Matter enough, Miss Margaret Huntley of Vancouver, Wash., Wa8|peen sent up for 10 days. Now shoot. rested because the man tould him . have a jolt on the jaw.” fought a low blackguard and gobi} I am not asking you to do any 10 Dance Tickets for 25¢ “Perhaps 1 did—the Lord forgive sorry I am, Miss Margaret |that ‘ud be glad to do yere washin’| pad youRy | the priest is right | |*Pat’s not bad, and between a wife and the church we'll be able to make a man of him yet.’ I've good | He says to me | oy, Much of Her They'd Risk Jail to Carry Her Off as a Bride. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 11— Beventeen-yearold Sadie Broad- hurst, petite and shy, and scarce- ly out of short frocks, knows how | it feels to be wooed by a cave man, Carried off bodily by her tem- Pestuous admirer, 18-yearold Charles Bozelie, son of a promt- nent merchant of San Jose, and compelled to flee, with him in a wild 60-mile night ride, after he had taken her from the sanctuary of friends here at the point of a gun, the girl became the unwilling heroine tn one of the most daring love episodes of modern times. Defends Him Now But by some fnexplicable quirk of a woman's heart, the experience clinched her wavering affection, even though the adventure landed her cave man in jail with a serious charge against him. She has turned like a fury against those who would punish her abductor. “I think I would do {t all over again if he asked me,” said Miss Broadhurst, attempting to mini- | mize the gravity of the offense to | Sadie Broadhurst, 17-year-old trained nurse, who was kidnaped by modern cave man in heart of city. TEACHER AS BARBER NO CRIME, SAYS JUDGE SELIGMAN, Artz,, Sept. 11.—This town 1s apparently well pleased with the acquittal of Miss Grace Miller, pretty school teacher, who 8 charged with assaulting Carl Draper, one of her pupils, be-| cause she cut his hair. Her alleged offense consisted in aring Draper's hair after long efforts to induce the lad to appear in the class in @ neat condion, | the girl with assault, The trial was largely attended. The Judge said he could find noth- ing in the Arizona laws covering | such an offense, refused to enter- tain a complaint from local barbers that the teacher had been cutting hair without a license, and released the girl. MOTORED TO HER GRAVE LONDON.—-The body of Mrs. Rebecca Clark, 110, was taken to the cemetery {n a motor car, in ac- cordance with her death-bed quest. St. Louis . | Cleveland Chicago . Indianapolis Brooklyn Baltimore Buttaio Kansas C1 St. Loute Pittsburg om 4-7, Philadelphia Brookiyn 1-2; P Chiengo 2; St. Loute 8, ‘AMERICAN--Philadeiphia #, Boston 1; | Washington 4; ft. Louis 6. ffalo 19, © Baltimore pokane 4, Seattle ; Ballard 1, Tacoma 0; Vancouver 2, Victoria 1 COAST—Portiand 1, Loe Angeles 4; Onkiand 6, San Francieco 0; Venioe 4, HE GETS FAT ON | BEANS AND MILK ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 11.—Re-| ling told he was four pounds less than the required weight for a re-| cruit for the army, Kenneth De Lawter of this city began a diet of beans and buttermilk, eating six, times a day for six days. He then weighed « half-pound more than the required weight end was ac-' copted. . Call at my De- | partment of Op- | tometry, eyes exami fitted, and 1 will antes satiatac- n, Gupticate lenses for #1. Tnvestiga| epectal. vinton tiny Jenues for 610, nev SIBLE Double Vision BEST IN THE WORLD DEPARTMENT First Av., Washington Bldg Dr. Edwin J: Brown Cures Men Who, Through Errors or Ex- » are victims of Insom- Despondency, Indigestion, fn Debility, pation, Loss of Energy and Ambition, Mental and Physical Wrecks, should renew their youth by using Dr.Pierce’s Tablets By mall, $1 per box, or 6 boxes for $5. Every box guar- anteed. Money refunded if they fail. Not a Temporary Stimulant, but a Permanent Cure. Try it and you will not be disappointed. Hotel Baden Grill Entertainment of Highest Merit For sale by Kinsell Bros., Second and Madison and Third id Columbia. Address ail letters to Raymond Remedy Co. 217 Pike 8t., Seattie, Wash. got to give him another chance Miss Margaret. “I was not doin’ me part, Misr Margaret, when I left him. I war nather true to him or the bleased church which had given him to me He's my man, Miss Margaret, and T've got to kape him and make him good, if I can, but, good or bad, I've got to kape him. “Besides,” she added, with a shy Trish smile, “It's mestif that does} not want to lave him go. Pat can] be the best man in the warld if he'l | lave the drink alone, and it's many/ @ woman that 'ud be glad to be his wife—drunk or sober.” “AN right, Annie; we'll see what we can do about it,” I answered relieved to find things were turn ing out that way, for I had already decided that Annie would not be able to cook. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) SHE WORE BEADS ST. LOUIS, Sept. 11,—Oscar Dane, son of the late Rabbi Mess- without long, unkempt locks falling i over his ey Finally, losing pa- A “DIP” AT EIGHT tience, the school ma'am took her NEW YORK.—"You've got me selssors, and, despite the boy'’s|right,” boastfully said 8-year-old struggles, cut the hair from his Julian Daliano, when he was forehead. The boy's jparents!rested at Coney island in the act brought criminal action, chargingof picking a woman's pocketbook. Teutons and Slavs at War 900 Years Just as primitive people recognized as foe the man whom they could not understand, the great world war that threatens will be a clash of tongues. The Slav is fighting for his language and his race, pitted against the Teuton. There are between 125,000,000 and 140,000,000 of the Slavic branch of the Aryan race, held together by a common ancestry of language, ordinarily a loose bond but strong enough now to draw all together on the fighting line to battle to the death for the pres- ervation of their mother tongue. The original Slav came from the region of the Upper Dneiper river in what is now Russia. In the third century they began to spill over Burope in all He is ing, was made the “goat” by the | police when they summoned him | because, as the theatrical booking agent, he had supplied the dancer B.who appeared ina single strand of small beads at a cabaret show giv-! en in the American hotel annex for | ithe State Hardware Men's conven-| tion. | Dane—that's his stage name— told the prosecuting attorney he thought the girl wore something more than beads, but he was not sure, irections. As early as the tenth century, the Germans pressed them back and the contest with the Teutons has waged, bloodily or diplo- matically, for 900 years. There are three groups of Slay ri In the east are the Russians, In the west are the Poles, Wends, s and Slovaks, while in the south are the Slavonians, the fans, the Serbs, Montenegrins, Herzegovinians and Bosnians. There has been an interblending of races through the cen- turies that has ‘wiped out any pure “Slav type”—but the mother tongue, spoken in different dialects, has kept alive a dream of the Slavic empire and its battle cry is heard by even remote rela- tives when menaced by a common foe, the authorities, to whom she has interceded for leniency. Kidnape Her In Auto Modernizing the pre-Adamite’s methods of winning a mate by utilizing a high-powered automo- bile and a revolver, Bozelle forced his way into the home of Dr. W. J. Hawkins, where Miss Broadhurst was employed as nurse, held off the family at the point of his gun, and carried his screaming sweetheart to the waiting machine, speeding away into the night. In warding off the girl's pro- tectors, he fired several shots, one of which slightly wounded the sister of Mrs. Hawkins. Shoots Woman It was this which resulted in a charge of assault to commit mur- der being placed against him aft- er he had been arrested several hours later at San Jose, It had been his purpose, too, s0 he declared, to secure the li- cense an@ to consummate the marriage at the point of his re- volver if any protest should de- velop. The automobile utilized by the young cave-man lover was com- mandeered in the heart of the city here, Bozelle placing his re- volver at the chauffeurs head and commanding him to obey or- ders. “T love Charlie,” Miss Broad- hurst said, after a talk with him in his cell, “and I certainly will not prosecute him. If I had known he loved me so much I would have married him any- way. He has always been so kind and gentle toward me—ex- cept that night,” TAILORING re-| Hundreds of men stop daily to admire the beautiful fabrics and stylish fashions which are on display in our windows. tn, to examine the ¥ | will be obligated or t |tallored clothes too high in price. | No Such Thing abilahment, workmanshi and prices are concerned. and you can nal invitacion to come. dn \we are doing for the wen Bet don't ie ill you mt volar Hg wal a pe one misty sled cS, ONES, TAILORS sai ena a

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