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

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STAR--MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1914. PAGE 7 HANK GOWDY WAS ONLY A BAT BOY FEW YEARS AGO; Once upon a time Frank Baker of the Athletios, one of the gisaieas| sluggers the game has ever known, wae “canned” because of weak bat: | ting. It happened back In 1905 or 1906, The Glants had turned | | Shor to the Baltimore Internationals for seasoning. He lasted just a A few years ago Hank Gowdy, the Boston catcher, who starred inl | the world's series, acted bat boy for the Columbus American | tion team. Gowdy went to the New York Giants as first baseman, He was too big and clumsy to navigate around the first sack, so McGraw| | started remodeling him into a backstop. But the Giants had too mony} “HOME RUN” BAKER| WAS ONCE GIVEN) THE CAN FOR BUM) short time, and wae let out “because he's a punk fielder and can’t hit.”| WORK WITH STICK! BROADWAY T0 SCRAP QUAYS DURING WEEK The contest on Dugdale field Sat urday afternoon between elevens from Broadway and Bal lard, indicates that these teams must be reckoned with In doping out the champion for the 1914 Interscholastic football season. While Broadway won, the close re Bult left a lot of spectators tn doubt as to which really was the lone touchdown, better team. A the result of a 45-yard run by Cole- man, the Broadway halfback, was the only score of the day. Despite the heavy rains that de scended prior to the conflict, the ground was in fairly good shape and neither team suffered severely from the weather conditions. Coleman's long dash to the goal Mine was only one of the spectacu- Jar feats uncorked by the Pine ireet dusky, Coleman is a 100 yard man and after he had bat tered his way through both lines of defense, the rest was easy. He was the big ground gainer of the day, and picked holes in the strong Ballard line, at will, Ballard plays Franklin Friday, and Saturday comes the big game between Rroadway Anne AUSTIN & SALT it a ian. Rosine, "Wrestling, nog —e AMERICAN CAFE FOURTH AND PIKE ERNEST GIANETTI, ‘he non ane ENTERTAINMENT FRENCH DINNER With Bottle of Wine—5S0c EVERY FO DAY TO PORTLAND VIA THE O-W. R. & N. THREE ms DAILY That Take You TO THE EAST VIA THE O-W. R. & N. OREGON SHORT LINE UNION PACIFIC rT TRAINS DAILY That Take You TO CALIFORNIA VIA THE O-W. R. & N. AND SOUTHERN PACIFIC OFFERING Elegant Trains Steel Coaches Unexcelled Service Courteous, Efficient Employes and All Facilities of Up-to-Date Railroad Service THE TRAINS: Stee! Flyer Leaves Seattle 7:20 a. m. Arrives Portland 2 p. m. Shasta Limited Leaves Seattle 9:30 a. m. Arrives Portland 2:20 p. m. PePortiand-Puget Sound Express Leaves Seattle 11: 3 Arrives Portland 6:1 Ow! (Portland and Grays Har- bor) Leaves Seattle 11:15 p. m Arrives Portland 6:45 a. m. Arrives Hoquiam 7:15 a, m. (Sleeping Cars Ready at 9:20 p. m.) TRAINS For further details, tickets and reservations, call on J. H. O’NEILL Dict. Pass. Agt. 716 SECOND AV. MAIN 932, the two The Roston team ts not the only pebble on the beach. Indeed not! For instance, there is the Tell Strollers nine of Cleveland, € Yesterday at Chicago the Stroll ers copped the world’s amateur and Queen | | | Saxe, Catcher Asmussen and Pitcher Skinner, star battery of the Butler Bros.; Schreiner, the hitting first sacker of the Strollers, and Saxe, | the pitching star. | baseball championship in a hotly contested battle with Butler Bros. {team of Chicago. The game was played in the Windy City. Score Cleveland 3, Chicago 2 The Telling Strollers of Cleve land, the city In which the amateurs are, perhaps, better organized than any other place, lost only two games during the season's race and one tn the elimination series. When this team defeated the |} Street Cleaners the 80,000 crowd | turned out. Cleveland then eliminated St. Louis and Toledo, while Chicago put Loutsville and Omaha out of | the running. | Then the Butler Bros. nine of Chicago clashed with the Cleveland | |club fn the latter city on Sunday, | October 11, winning the first game, | 11 to 1, and losing the second, 4| to 1. More than 20,000 persons saw the battles. 3 OF ’EM ARE OUT CHICAGO, Oct. 19 —towa, Pur. } | the running for 1914 titles sult of Saturday's reverses. BELLINGHAM, Oct. 19.—Fist fights featured Saturday's game be- tween the Everett and local high |schools, won by the visitors, 60 jto 0. MATCH PLOW HORSES KANSAS Flynn and Carl |imatched for a 10-round bout here Oct. 29. STANFORD WINNER | STANFORD “UNIV: ERSITY, 19.—The Stanford fifteen defeated the Berkeley Titan club with ease Saturday, winning, 35 to 6. “MICH” MAN HURT ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 19.— Quarterback Mughitt, of the Mi igan eleven, was so badly hurt in Saturday's game with the Aggies he probably will be out of the game all this season. GAME IS CANCELED WALLA WALLA, Oct. 19.—-The game scheduled between Gonzaga are) © ITY, Oct. 19.—Jim Oct. 31 has been called off. CORVALLIS, Oct. 19—The Ore gon Aggies were easy winners over the Willamette University eleven in a practice game played here Saturday afternoon. FEDS TO TRY Ni. Y. Oct. 19 ‘The Federal have a ball team in CHICAGO, league will New Gilmore has announced SPOKANDP, Oct. 19-—The game here Saturday between the Mon tana University and Idaho ended in a 00 tle. Montana beat Pullman, 10 to 0, two weeks ago. TRINITY IS VICTOR Defeating the Adelphia college quintet Saturday night, the Trinity M. BH. basketball team registered its second victory of the season. O'TOOLE TO PIRATES PITTSBURG, Oct 19.—Marty O'Toole will be with Pittaburg again Morris have been! and.Whitman College for Spokane) York next season, President | IDAHO IN TIE GAME) | He Joined Connie Mack In 1909. | BOSTON BRAVES HAVE A RIVAL; CLEVELAND STROLLERS DEFEAT CHIGAGO Nit NINE FOR THE WORLD’S CHAMPIONSHIP iE | pert, who says that the big Brave | pitcher had one bail that stood the M | thi | th te | right handers, too clo | with any effect. on the order of Matty's fadeaway, only it broke to the th | lee crushed the Athietio attack so co! ed. Overall, and Tesreau slammed away in a | frenzied down. th THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE THIS IS TH due and Ohio are regarded as out of | | (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper mured love words in my ear. | Enterprise Association.) Dick undressed hurriedly and went to bed long before I was able to get my poor soiled dress straight- ened out where it would dry in any kind of shape. I finally lay down beside him and I must have gone to sleep, for |1 woke up all of atremble | myself raging from head to foot | 1 kept thinking how ugly Dick | had been to me. His last words were sarcastically cruel and how he had let me see from the first that he thought I was foollsh to come. I could not n that the same lips that had smiled 80 contemptuously had oft 5 Oct. | | | } | ye i P Individuality Liggett Myre Xbacce Co 20 for 15# tinctively indi viciual | Drinking Men There is no place in the business world for the man who drinks, He is not wa |pendable. The Governor of one | state declares he will not appoint to office any man who becomes in toxicated, and all large concerns are adopting t¥e same | polley. Do not be handicapped by this habit all craving for drink in three d without the use of injections—by the Neal Driul Habit Treatment. Call and let us explain to you how you can be treated at the Neal Institute—or at your home—and be restored to sobriety. Write or phone for full |particulars and free book. The Neal Institute, 1736 Sixteenth Ave., Seattle, Wash. Phone Bust 4281 buginoss You can be freed from hypodermic next season, He has signed a 1915 contract with the Pirates. Gity office, 802 Northern Bank building. I felt | ke myself believe | Not Wanted 4 becanse he ts not de-| — MARRIED LIFE | I thought as soon as I coased | trembling with the hot rage that consumed me I would wake him up EB. PORTS dass ae |dolph looked to be a wonde yesterday Bill | elege gun, looked to be the gr || piteher In th gather in, work of write on The manly art of winning on a fou) AND GO TO START TRAINING MoGovern, asaistant of the Inte J. eventa at the 1915 exposition. ILL JAMES, who pitched for} Seattle two ye. ago, |e given a great boost by Grant-| nd Rice, the clever Collier's ex ackmen on thelr turrets, “It was a low ball, shot acro e kneecap with a sudden break | at fell away from a left hand hit-| r and swerved In sharply for the to be hit It wae something side rather an down. This mysterious serv-| mpletely that It never got start The mighty sluggers that beat Brown, Matty, Marquard attempt to break James! “On Friday,” saya Rice how to fig! He never took @ good right cross Upon his waesing Jaw; Me never gathered bedy blows Untll his sides were raw; Me never felt the ating of Jabs That made him black and bine, Bat hs can siwaye tell you what A fighter ought to do. the fertile gossip surrounding the | Glen Cove, L. all night at cats haven't any bar rooms to Georges Carpentier pauses in his destroying Germans to| boxing as a manly art beyond us. Speaking of advanced jour- naliem; a Chicago paper is printing pice of football play- ers under the caption: “Who will star In tomorrow's gam | ove IT IS BETTER TO OVERTRAIN | STALE THAN NEVER} | M’GOVERN TO ACT | SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 19.—J. J. | Sullivan, will handle the athletic jin hi ‘BUSH BEATS JAMES catchers around, and Hank soon got the “can.’ ion FAKE KICK ALWAYS FOOLS "EM---TRY IT | BY A COLLEGE COACH FAKE KICK—For the fake kic | same lineup method as for the punt is used, | deceive the other side and have it weaken its line defens: eive the kick, The quart and, running to the left, tackle, Several good plays can be d | | STARTED ON 1ST U.W. GETTING IN SHAPE FOR FIRST GAME This ‘s the week of final praw tlee at Denny field, where the University of Washington eleven is preparing for the opening of |the conference season here Satur day. Whitman will oppose Wash ington, Washington, six times |champion, is conceded an easy vietory, for Oregon toppled the Missionaries to a 29-3 score two KS ago, N YOUR NEXT GAME The Pullman-Oregon game at Portiand on Saturday proved most surprising as it was thought that Oregon was capable of piling up a big score on Johnny Bender's aggregation. Oregon won, 7 to 0, by a plece of good fortune, little Johnny Parsons slipping through the Pullman line for an 18-yard {run that brought the ball to the |three-yard mark. On the next |\play Parsons again wiggled through the wall of beef and made @ touchdown. Philbrin and Beckett, Oregon players, were banished from the field for rough tactics, eee General Manager Arthur Young k, or run from kick formation, the The idea, naturally, is to | by deploying | k catches the ball direct from slips through between guard and | jevised out of this formation, FEMALES LICK | MALE GOLFER Probably the most astounding golf story of the year comes from preliminaries to the woman's golf ampionship recently played at 1. The story is that| & man—a golf professional of con- niderable standing—played in the| qualifying round of the tournament disguined as a woman and falled to qualify It is stated that the man was em- ployed by a woman golfer to play ead and that, garbed fn woman's clothes, he made the at-| tempt, but efther lost his nerve or was hampered by his petticoats. MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 19.—Joe | Bush beat Bill James in a pitching duel here Sunday, the All-Amer jeans trouncing the All-Nationals 6 to 3. James fanned 11, The Americans otung James ) tor 18 hits, | er of the U. of W. has made ar. rangements for admitting boys 1 years old and under to Satui game free. The youngsters view the battle from the stand the east end of the field. CELTICS TRIM LOCAL RIVALS — The Seattle Celtics scored a ster ling victory over their local rivals, the Nationals, in a furiously fought game at Dugdale's park Sunday afternoon. The score was 3 to 1. The slippery condition of the ground made it hard for the play- ers to show their best, but it was the spirit of rivalry between the men that stirred up the fans, The Nationals got the jump in the first half when they scored 1 against the Celtics’ 0. 17 TOUCHDOWNS ABERDEEN, Oct. 19.—Th: deen high school eleven trimmed ARMY TO PLAY NAVY! Puyallup Saturday, 114 to 0. Aber. JAMES TWIRLS HERE OCT. 29) Manager Bancroft, handling the All-American All-National tour, which includes the Pacific coast and Pacific Northwest, has fixed | October 29 as the date of the game in Seattle. Bancroft closed ar- rangements with Owner Dugdale for use of the Seattle park late Saturday afternoon Seattle fans are all “het up” over the exhibition, for Bill James, with Seattle two years ago, and the pitching star of the world’s series, is going to toil for the Nationals on that day. BROOKS WITH S. A. C. Charley Brooks, the former Vic- |toria first baseman, has taken charge of the billiard rooms of the Seattle Athletic club, BACK TO AMATEURS NEW WESTMINSTER, Oct. 19.— Amateur hockey will be played here this winter, New Westminster ha ing been dropped from the profes- sional league. WAS INGTON, Oct. 19—The| deen scored 17 touchdowns. Army-Navy game is on again. Sec-) HOPPE TAKES MATCH retary of War Garrison states the| game will be played in Philadelphia! in November. CHICAGO, Oct. 19- 19.—Willie Hoppe took another match from Melbourns Inman when he won last night's A STAR WANT AD will) block, 1,000 to 127. go into over 45,000 homes} every night it runs. | and tell him how fiendishly he bad treated me who had hoped only for Joy in this visit + I knew If we had not been mar. ried and Dick had unexpectedly met me in Cincinnatl he would have been overjoyed and if I had stumbled and fallen in the muddy streets he could not have said enough to make me understand how sorry he was for me. In his sleep Dick's arm reached | out for me. I got as far away from ft as possible. I turned my back and stretched out as nearly to the edge of the bed as I could with out falling ont. 1 felt that if be | touched me I would scream. Isn't {t strange, little book, that marriage changes © man so much? Before we were married Dick |Beemed to think my sudden tm pulses were the most delightful things that the world could hold and now he makes me think that I put an ingrowing sentiment above all the other facts of life. I suppose it is because I love him so much that everything he says in ridicule or condemnation hurts me 80. I don’t helleve that I could live without him, and God knows It Is hard living with him. Live without Dick! All at once my rage left me and I felt that I was a peevish, whin ing woman with whom Dick found it quite as hard to live as I did to live with him. I longed to tell him this—to tell him how sorry I was that I had been so foulish as to try and surprise him when he ‘had probably as much business on hand as he could attend to without play ing the gallant to me. I put out my hand. ly clasped tn Dick's. been asleep either. I put my head on his bosom and cried as I had never done since we were married. It was warm He had not thinking how fool {sh I was, dear,” I sald “I'm a plain case of brute,” answered “No, you're not, but I'm just a boob,” was my interruption. “I now you meant to give me pleas ure on my birthday and because | you did {t in a way I was not ex- pecting, I did not do anything to meet you half way,” he continued. Then Dick kissed me solemnly and made some remark about my tears making the collar of his | pajamas Mmp, but I was so happy | that we were at peace again and was already half asleep between my sobs Although I spent the next day in my room trying to fix up my mud covered dress and took the night train home, I am glad I went, for as Dick put me on the car he sald “Margie, you are the best little wife in ali the world and I'm glad you came, even if it was perhaps | more tears than smiles,” Dear Pick! He'll be home the| last of the week and I'm going to make him another birthday cake. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) he Golden Opportunities are of-| fered in Star Want Ads. CRIMP: CUT LONG BURNING PIPE AND, CIGARETTE TOBACCO “go Smoke tobacco, not tabasco ! listen to this There isn’t anything the matter with your smokappetite. You try Prince Albert in a jimmy pipe or rolling a few makin’s cigarettes before you do the next thing. And you'll wise up to What the doctor ordered! For P. AP ina cigarette or a pipe is a wonder—so bully in flavor and fragrance. And it’s easy to roll, because it ‘‘stays put.’’ Unlike any other tobacco, Prince Albert can’t bite} your tongue and can’t patented process. parch your throat. That’s cut out , by: a, No other tobacco can be made like PRINCE ALBERT Everywhere you travel than ever before. Since the national joy smoke throughout the nation you'll find more men amoking pipes P. A. hit the turf, less than five yeare ago, three men now smoke a pipe where one smoked before. What's the answer? Just you get your tidy red tin, fire up a few loads of “the national joy smoke,” and you'll wise up so quickly that’s no idle dream! you'll think you've been napping for the last few years. And Now do that little thing and get going in the right direction! J dealer's wii ide rad tin it get ihe never * By RS Re ie, ene Oe; py in eC, nd ans equainted right well ont hed any of The ee Ser ther By aha es R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C.

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