The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1914, Page 7

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PAGE 7, STAR—SATURDAY, SEPT. 12, 1914, POR WALTER CADMAN Is| \, jae ts out with a declaration that Walter (“Barker”) Cadman | | > | | has caw mor hi ir than any other catoher In wor! Eee R RE NUN NUE | Say cttman net worked intact" pune atthe 18 played by te Seattle club, The bulk of the catching fell to Cadman right at the WORKS 146 baceetaena | | Season's start, when Manager Tealey suddenly discovered that wT] CHAS, FULLERTON IS NURSING A_ HUGE | GROUCH; WELL, WE | From Bpokane comes the word that Charley Fullerton Is nursing| a hefty grouch. The peeve comes from the game in which Fullerton worked elght and Seattle winning, and for which hi gete no credit beca: Walter Malls opened the game, Walter was as! wild ae a hawk, and after two were down’ in the first he was yanked | and Charley went In. Walter gets credit for the victory, though. DON’T BLAME HIM YEAR; ALL GO IN THE HOLE Huhn was a great first baseman, NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Lost. 64 60 67 87 92 93 Pot 640 610 +853 A16 399 380 Vancouver . Seattic Spokane Victor: Tacoma Ballard NATIONAL LBAGUE Won. Lost Seattle SEATTLE MAY HAVEAN ALIBI = FOR BEATING. \IF Seattle defeats Vancouver next in the post series games, the { }fans may have an alib! to offer for jthe Glants’ vanquishment in the : A lot of ball players will have to go back to work a The Northwestern league jon closes tomorrow . . ty ye etmmatt With the curtain about to de-| roll scend upon the national pastime | linquish the franchise for almost in the Northwest, fans are giving| nothing. Where the Tacoma fran- some attention to the lineup for) chise could be put 1s « problem. next year, That the league roster —— ‘The Iron Man {s ready to re- AMERICAN LEAGUE ‘on, Laat. " Spokane— Wutttt, a Butler, = Friday's Results Aciphta a Seattle 7, Spokane 0, The date has been set for the) ening of the world’s series. The mes will start Saturday, October Who will be the opponents can only be conjectured. From present Indications, it looks a great like the fight will be between Athletics and the Br b the race in their respective leagu is a long way from being settied, The Athletics have a gigantic lead, but almost a month remains to play. On the other hand, the Na- tional fight Is nip and tuck, and the very moment the Braves siow up, in will march General McGraw and his troops. ; see When Welser Del! joins the! Brooklyn Dodgers next spring, to | whom he has been soli, he will be able to renew the acquaintance of nother former Northwestern boy | in the person of Charley Schmutz. | ‘This ts Charley's first year in the | majors. Charley tolled against New York Friday and had the great Matty as a mound opponent. | New York trimmed the Dodgers, $to 0. Schmutz allowed 11 hits. *. Through the mail today comes a) d the beaming Dan Sait and Lonnie Austin in announcement of the formal opening of their big gymnasium fn the Arlington hotel) DO YOU KNOW} That Seattle has the finest biltiard parlor in the world? Come in and see, BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Fieor ‘| battle for the Northwestern league ington tt Vancouver Victoria butiding, Mond: . Says Johnny O'Leary, who meets Sally Salvadore at Brighouse this afternoon, In a letter to the sport ing editor today: “Of course, I ex pect to win. Salvadore has beaten good men—Young Abe Attell, Jim my Reagan, Tommy McParland. and won the tithe of King of the Four Rounders by decisively beat- ing Willie Hoppe tn Frisco, but I beat him easily twice, although he has one 15-round decision over me. 1 certainly am far better than I ever was, I shall be astonished if I don’t knock him out eee Everything Is going up. Now a Chicago Wants $25,000 for damage to his reputation. A Gilmpse Ahead September 21—Directum and William, two minute pacers, match race; Grand Rapids, Mich, 7. BOB PATE is dead. He was a gambler who refused to be seen tn the company of the persous who gained control of horse racing eee Evidently those Germans are vio- lating the rules; using the tackle back mass against the left end. cee BILLY PAPKE is coming back, but never mind, he won't get this far. RESUME TENNIS The West Side Tennis club to- resumed its tournament, play in which began Sanday. anant. Had the Northwestern 16 wehedule been played to tts jentirety, the coming week would |have seen the Beavers and Giants |in & struggle that was destined to {settle the league champfonship, | There ts some promise that the . 4 two teams will play next weex ~4 with both Hneups almost intact The players are out two full weeks’ ary as a result of the shortened schedule, and are anxious to make up the deficit, They believe the |games will be well patronized for | the reason of the o ons of the race, and the feeling of many of the Seattle fans that the Gianty would have had a good chance for | the flag If the season had gone the j Mit The series opens Monday at Dug: dale field, The players will divide the receipts. eccccoscets Three-base hit Double Mubn, Bases on baile k out—Dell &, at feattie T, Mpokane & IN OTHER LEAGUES _ Chicago | Washington 4 Brooktyn ¢) | Lae Angeles 3 I Yentoe 6 GETS A 98 SCORE DAYTON, ©. Sept. 12,—The Grand American trapshoot bandi }eap was won Friday by Woolfolk | Henderson of Lexington, Ky., with ore of 98 out of 100. Five! two from California, finished with scores of 96. ‘SET NEW MARKS BALTIMORE, Md. Sept. 12. AGGIE IS INJURED NEWPORT BEACH, Ore. Sept 12,—Earle (Steve) Schuster, one of the most promising aspirants for & place in the Agstes’ backfield, broke his left shoulder blade tn practice here, and will be unable to play this season. PLAY FOR TITLE new records were hung up| GARDEN CITY, Sept, 12.—E. P here Friday in the junior champton-| Allis, Harvard captain, and L. M fehip meet, A. A. U. The new| Washburn, Princeton, play for th marks are: Five miles, 28 min-|{ndividual golf champlonship of utes 15 second; javelin, 165 feet| the Intercollegiate Golf assoctation }2 inches; running broad jump, 23| here today. | feet 1 inch | ia THOSE FELLOWS WHO WERE | AL SQUARE, the new Western) SO ANXIOUS TO SWIM THE ENG | tennis champ, usually {s all square,|LISH CHANNEL NOW HAVE OPPORTUNITY; THAT'S lor better, | THEIR ONLY WAY TO GET (Continued From Page 1.) ture had to be informed. Besides, the theme “youthful motherhood” is so extremely well adapted for art and literature. It belongs to the class of the best j sung and most carefully painted BASEBALL DOUBLE-HEADER TOMORROW BALLARD vs. TACOMA FIRST GAME AT 2 P. M. Admission, 25¢, 50c_75¢ and $1.00 Take Fourth Ave. Cars. Ty = Quality ICE e: ICE DELIVERY CO. ELLIOTT 5560 Bronchial Asthma! Mf you are a sufferer from asthma in any form, ft will pay you to investigate. I have cured asthma of 30 years’ standing, not in Boston and jew York, but here in Seattle and towns around Seattle, and | I have not failed in one of them. Now, if you are a suf. ferer from this disease and can't sieep nights, I will give relief at once and a cure in time. The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth- ma, Bronchitis, Catarrh tn all its forms, such as Tonsillitis, Adenoids, Gastric Ulcer of the Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh of the Bladder, Prostatitis in men, all Bowel Diseases in women; Rheumatism of all forms; all Nervous Diseases, Epilepsy, Heart and Eczema, and many others too numer- ous to mention. If you are in doubt, write apd I will give you names and addresses of people I have cured Olympic View Sanitarium, 14-16 W. Harrison DR. G. J. NUERNBERG Phone Queen Anne 3127 and pathetically, simply and affec |ttonately—in short, — {mmensely poetically. | | There had been now for a long |time a certain black point visible lon the political horizon, about the | possible increase of which the live- Hest commentaries were made in nd at all private par. ad up to that time thought | nothing about it. My husband and my father and |thefr military friends might have loften said in my hearing, “There | will soon be something to settle | with Italy,” but it glanced off my | understanding. I had little time or tnelination |to trouble myself about politics. | So that, however eagerly people talked of relations between Sardinia jand Austria, or the behavior of Na |poleon IIL, of whose help Cavour |had assured himself by taking part lin the Crimean war, or however constantly they might talk about | the tension which this alliance had lealled forth between |Italian nelghbors, I took no notice of ft. j * | But on April 1, my to me very seriousl: | “Do you know, dea | soon break out?” | “What will break out, darling?” | “The war with Sardinia.” I was terrified | | | husband satd “My God! that would be terrible! And will you have to go?” T hope 0.” How can you say such a thing?! Hope to leave your wife and child!” “If duty calls. “One might reconcile oneself to it; but to hope—which means wish —that such a bitter duty should arise!” | “Bitter! A rattling, folly war | like that must be something glori- ous! You ar soldier's don't forget that. I fell on his neck “Oh, my dear husband, be con tent. I also can be brave. How often have I sympathized with the heroes, and heroines of history! What an elevating feeling it must be to go Into battle! If Il only might fight, fall, or conquer at your side!” | “Bravely spoken, little wife, but nonsense! Your place is here, by the cradle of the little one, who} also is to become a defender o his country when he ts grown up, Your place is at our household hearth. It 1s to protect this, and guard {t from any hostile attack, to preserve peace for our homes and our wives, that we men have to go to battle.” | 1 don't know why, but these | words, or something of the same | sort, which | had often heard read with a it, this time med to me to be In sense mere “phrases.” There was certainly no hearth menaced, no horde of barbarians at the gate, merely a political tension | between two cabi -* No, this splendid, perfect hap. piness which fate had just buflt as a snug house for me, it was tm possible that the same fate should roughly shatter it to pleces! | “Oh, Arno, my dearly-loved hui band! {t would be horrible to know that you are in danger!” These and similar outpouring fill the leaves of the diary which were written in those days. ¥}palgn talked about always from the us and our| that ft will wife; d| “To Inform the Almighty of the THE ACRO; | | | | | ' If you have not been reading the My father, also, was all on fire|@dvertisements of Prince Albert for the war. | tobacco, the national joy smoke, To conquer the Piedmontese| YoU have missed a rare treat en- would be only child's play; and, in| Joyed by countless thousands of support of this ssettion, the| lovers of the pipe and cigarette. Radetzky anecdotes were told| They are so appealingly human in again. I heard the impending cam-| both text and {lustration that peo- ple everywhere follow them with keenest interest In quaint, happy language these advertisements tell all about Prince | Albert, the tobaceo that cuts out the “grouch” and just lets in the sunshine; how it serves to smooth out the ruffies and wrinkles in a |day's work and send you along right cheerful like, Watch for them. You'll enjoy thelr unique {illustrations and hu manness of expression. Read about the tobacco that will not bite your tongue or parch your throat, and that {s so fragrant, fresh and con: taining a flavor that makes pipe smoking about the sweetest consol- ation on earth.—Advertisement, ‘Smoker's Joy Tobacco That's Good For What Alis You. strategic point of view—1. «, a bal ancing of the chances on the two sides; how and where the enemy | would be routed, and the advant ages which would thereby accrue to “us.” | My husband's regiment was |quartered in Vienna. | From our house there w over the Prater, and from the win. dow there uch @ lovely prom ise of summer over everything. It} was a wonderful spring. view | “Now, thank God, at Inst this} uncertainty is at an end,” cried my husband one morning—April 19 |—on coming home from parade.| |“The ultimatum has been sent.” | 1 shrieked out: “Eh, what?/ | What does that mean? | It means that the last word of || the diplomatic’ formalities, the one which precedes the declaration of lwar, has been spoken. Our ulti | matum to Sardinia calls on Sardinia | to disarm. She, of course, will take [no notice of it, and we march across the frontier.” | “But perhaps they may disarm.” | Well, then, the quarrel would be at an end, and peace would con tinue.” | I fell on my knees. help it. Silently, but still as earnestly ar if with a cry, there rose the pray from my soul to heaven for “Peace! peace!” Arno raised me up ty silly child, what are you do I could not Penouston, PTEMBER 24-2! EXCURSION | ing Perens I threw my arms round his neck few 6: and began to weep. | It was no burst of pain, for the misfortune was certainly as yet not decided on; but the news had so |shaken me that my nerves quiv. lered, and that caused this flood of | tears, | “Martha, Martha, you will make id Arno, reproachfully my brave little } Do you forget that you are a general's danghter, wife of a first Hentenant, and,” he con cluded with a smile, “mother of a | corporal?” OREGON-WASHINGTOR rail. | ROAD & MAVIGATION COMPANY | Indianapolis Chicago ws Baltimore. Buffalo Portiang DIE ON WAY TO | BURY BROTHER CHICAGO, Sept. 12.—~Hugh and August ©. Becker, brothers, were | electrocuted as they stepped from a } florist’s, where they had purchased flowers for the funeral of their younger brother, Andrew, who was killed {n a motoreycte collision. The brothers emerged from the store, their arms filled with wreaths, and stepped to the edge of the walk An electric light wire fell and curled about the neck of August, He was enveloped in flame and died Instant ly. His brother grasped the wire to uncoll {t and met a similar fate, TYPIST BLIND CHICAGO, Sept, 12.—Martin Neu- man, & blind newsboy, sold his stand | here to go to work as a typewriter bperator. from birth. By working nights, he reached a speed of 80 words a min- ute on a typewriter. He ts 19 years old. He learned the ratsed-lotter | system as a child and kept up with | public echool classes until he com | pleted two years in the high schools, | hen he was obliged to go to work. | when he was obliged to goto work. Natl the loose planks about Seat- tle and the loose lies. | Bake Oven Treatment for Rheumatiom and All Com- gested Condl- DR. JOHN SORENSEN 515-214 Kite! Building. Phone Main #097 SANDERSON’S PILLS Most popu ¥ reliable remedy most obstinate tn 2 to 10 days, Price, box or 2 boxes for hey tall after fair trial, Open evenings KAYMOND REMEDY CO. Room 28, 217% Pike St. Si. Pau! Stove Repair & Plumbing Co. ai fire back | Refined Cafe Vaudeville Catering to the Select This Week Harry M. Carter “Dainty Marjorie” Dow Brink And 6 Other Acts. Coming Monday, August 31 Miss Merry Meakin Prima Donna Soprano. |, JOHNSON, Gen. Mgr. E. G. Wood, Amnt. Mgr. | “No, no, Arno, prehend myself. lof selzure. | am really myself ardent for military glory, But—I! do not know how It ls—a little while | ago everything was hanging on single word, which must by this| |time have been spoken—yes’ or| |‘no'—In answer to this ultimatum | | as It Is called, and this ‘yes’ or ‘no’| decides whether thousands must! bleed and die—die in these sunny, happy days of spring—and so it! |came over me that the word of |peace must come, and | could not help failing on my knees In prayer,” 1 do not com. It was only a kind | get a world of Information by | position of affairs, you dear titt | goose!” | + | The house bell rang. 1 dried my eyes nt once. Who could it be #0 early? It was my father, all in a hurry: “Now, children,” he erted, all out jof breath, throwing himself into an Jarm-chair. “Have you heard jareat news? The ultimatum. | “I have just told my wife.” | Rejected. The utliimatum re ected! This took place at Turin, \pril 26. ‘The die fs cast! War has broken out. (To Be Continued Monday.) At 206 He rushed in PI experts every afternoon at 2:15 and every evening at 7:30 At the White House Billiard Parlors in the Joshua Green Buliding, Fourth and Pike, An academy with seating capacity for 300 people has been built to accommodate the public. LEARN TO PLAY Any one wishing to learn the game of Pocket Billiards will attending the gi jayed by IMPERIAL BAR AND READING ROOM Occidental Service Bar and Pool Tables in Connection CHOICE LIQUORS AND CIGARS Ballard-Tacoma, postponed. BOXER NOMINEE) CHICAGO, Sept. 12—Complete election returns show that Edward M. Santry, known tn the boxing| ring as “Eddie Santry,” has won | the democratic nomination for | state representative, POLO IN SPOKAN SPOKANE, r t. 12.—A number| of crack polo teams from various points in the Northwest will com pete ina series of games to be| played next week during the inter. state fair, CAN’T GET HOME FROM ALASKA FAIRBANKS, Sept. 12.—Austrian and German reservists “inside” | have been warned by the White Pass & Yukon Rallroad Co. they must not attempt to pass the Yukon river on the company’s steamers, as they will be captured by Ca nadian authorities and held as pris oners of war. THE CONFESSIO MONEY 18 MARRIAG Enterprise Association.) Last evening Mary came over. Poor child! she looks very unbap- py. After Aunt Mary went to bed, |Mary rather opened her heart to) me. “Margie,” she asked, “did you really think that marriage would be just what you have found it?” “No, dear,” I answered most truthfully, “but I have not found it unpleesant for all of that.” “It seems to me,” she said wist fully, at there is no room fn the | business of marriage for love and |good times. I mean the exciting love and the inconsequential good times one has before marriage. | “You see, there are always so |many more tmportant things bob- bing up—particularly money. It looks Itke all the unhappiness in the wedded lives is caused by too much money or Inck of It. “Take Jack and me, for instance. Refore we were married Jack used | to send me flowers, candy and we used to go to the theatre and the restaurants and have all sorts of | good times ack seemed to have plenty of money to do this and I grew used to these attentions which every | girl gets. Jack was most devoted because I could do with him the | things he lkes to do, go where he lkes to go. | “Since we were married Jack |has to spend his flower and candy |money for meat and potatoes. I know I am silly to miss them, but I do, especially as it seems to me that he might do with a box of| cigarets less and bring me a rose. | Besides, I haven't the clothes to |go to the restaurants any more. | “Yesterday 1 felt almost neg- lected, although in a way I was) to blame. Jim Edie gave us tick-| ets for the horse show at the coun- | try club. I was not well enough to | go even if I had anything to wear, | | to tion has been surmised close students of the game. present time there seemsa littl likelihood that Victoria will re main in the clroult, and some fear has been expressed that the Ta coma club may be dropped, too, Many Want Club The present Buropean war has much to do with the destiny of the Northwestern league, If hostilt- tiles are still Old World in the spring of 1915, by many then there's hardly a chance in a| thousand that Victoria will be able | |to remain in the loop. Kingham has dropped several thousand dollars as a result of his venture, and the league season was curtailed to keep him from throwing up the sponge. Many cities along the Sound are clamoring for admittance and the Victoria franchise probably will be put in Bellingham or Everett, or the club may alternate between the two cities. Iron Man Loser Tacoma has also been a loser. Joe McGinnity has dropped a small- sized fortune trying to make a winner out of the club. He has the smallest payroll in the league for the reason that he has picked up most of his players off the lots, but nevertheless two years of thi i has eaten a big hole in his bank NS OF A WIFE E'S GREATEST WORRY Neuman had been blind | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper | and I told Jack to take his mother. I knew she would like to see the pretty clothes and bow to her fash fonable acquaintances, I knew that Jack did not have much money, 80 I ald: “You can bring your mother back here to dinner.” He said: ‘0, degr, don’t do all that work, I'll t dinner with mother downtown, might have invited me to take din- ner with them; my sult was good enough for that, butI was too proud so.” So I stayed alone until 10 o'clock and this morning Jack's mother called me up to tell me what a delightful time her dear boy had given her. “'You would have thought I was the sweetheart,’ she said jubilantly. ‘He bought me a dozen roses and box of candy and we had dinner t the ——— restaurant.’ “L suppose I ought not to feel| js hurt at the attention my husband pays his mother, but he would never have thought of taking hei if 1 had not suggested it, and the money he spent on the flowers and | ® candy would have let me join the dinner at the restaurant. I neither got the credit for giving her a good time nor had one mfself. “Today Jack asked me to go to dinner with him tonight, and when | I said: “I'd be glad to go,’ he said Well, Mary, I'll have to borrow some money of you to take us.’ “Then we can't go,’ I answered, ‘tor I have barely money enough to pay the household bills the ré mainder of the week.’ We both were grumpy at our home dinner, and soon after he went out and I came over here. “Is there any way things, Margie? “I don't know, Mary, perhaps they will right themselves after a bit.” But I felt that was cold com- fort even while I was saying It. (To Be Continued Monday.) Lillian Gish, at the age of 6, won love and devotion all over the coun try as “Little Eva” in “Uncle Tom's Cabi Now she is a movie star with the Majestic company and keeps right on being as lovable as ever. | Tho most striking thing about the deautiful child actre: | PRETTIEST BLOND IN MOVIELAND a shining curls, like golden sili. Today, at 17, David Belasco calls her “the most beautiful blonde in the world,’ Miss Gish has an innocent, ap- pealing face, large blue eyes, and a full mouth, slightly pouting like a little child's, Sho has a very graceful, girli#h was her long, / figure and when she wears frills and At the being waged in the; Owner | T felt that he/| es to change | 1 is deemed to undergo some altert-| WHAT WAR WILL | DO FOR EUROPE By EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 8. 718 First Av. All the Socialists of all the world are against war because jare instituted by the rul | the Interest of the exploit jrace who get profit; and the Social- 8 are representatives of the ex- loited class who get shot. | If the rulers of Servia, Austria, | Germany, France, Belgium and Eng- land h interest of their re- osseased of common seni less divine knowledge and inspire: tion, do you not think they could have adjusted their difficulties without making a human hi field of all Murope? | ‘Theee rulers ing class require it, | plotted class are led laughter on the shamble spar. to of de- ertion that if @ 4 been taken in ‘of each ture the a referendum vote bh each country now at war, man eligib! nd on war, while the sordid profit- monger alone would vote for war. EDUCATION TO TOILERS. Last week J printed the editorial of Harrison Grey Otis from the Los Ang: s. He states that “THE THRONE OF ALMOST EVERY RULER IN EUROPE WAS IN JEOP- A AFTER ELEC- FRANCE AND FOR THE IN- % oT, WHICH N OF EUROPE’S S INEVITABLE, D He tells us the opinions of statesmen }in Burs I do not call a man who 1 think politician, and the “thron were in jeopardy,” says Otis, Well, Otis, do you think that murdertny ple 4 the Socialists are mistaken? think that you can shoot nd religion Into the working class jof Europe so deep! that Few bd n, reveals truth to us. Ott The soldiers on the around their campfire will exchange fdeas and come to know, whether they be German, French, Belgian, | English, Russian’ or Austrian, thet | their interests are the same if they workers and their ine terests are opposed to the exploiting class. It requires very Uttle understand ing to become convinced that the only thing the common people can get out of this war ts bullets and that load is a heavy diet and powder a distasteful dessert EDUCATION, It's a terrific method of education, I will admit, but facts are facts, and if the people are so dogmatic as to be led Into murder by a counterfeit who claims divine right as his guide, then the scales of darkness may ha eyes before they can see the bogus rulers who inspire them to butchery of each other while the profit- mongers who are represented by these rulers get away with the swag. ROYALTY AND DIVINE RIGHT DOOMED, Ere long the working people of Europe will see that “Royalty” ts the representative of those who effect thelr robbery and that “Divinity” re- mains with the robbers, while deg- jon given to the share in life, beyond the grave’ ceptable to the working class much longer as sufficient rea- son and ground for their condition, They are learning in the University of “hard knocks” while bullet bombshells are being hurled at civ- iilzation by order of divine right royalty in the interest of the profit- monger, The definition of Royalty (to the producer) is robbery of the product of his toil, while the conscious wor! er is compelled to construe divi right to mean the right of the ex- ploiters to teke from him the wealth he creat The war in Europe will compel the working class to recognize its mi terial class interest and it will con- vince them that no matter what their nationality may be, if they work for wages and are compelled to sell thelr labor-power to live “thelr In= terests are identical.” and the Inter- ests of their masters are identical reardiess of national boundary nes, This war will demonstrate to Bu- rope that capitalism as an institution has served its purpose and has be~ ome incompatible with the public good and social progre: the rulers are incompeten less under thts system. This war will reveal to the “work- ers of Europe that they must unite and effect their class Gy They have nothing to lose but tl while they have Burope to . Mr. Otis, the Socialists of Bu- rope are the only hope of Europe, and ere long they will be required to rid the murdering kings and capital- h other. r will demonstrate that the people of Europe are no longer safe under militarism and there fe no place nor institution to guarantee their safety but “Soclalism. Next week I shall tell what caused the war, EDWIN J. BROWN, 713 First Avenue,

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