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anne een meer peer ink giFine Tennis Features Tournaments at Firloch Club and Woodland Par WOMEN TENNIS PLAYERS. eee ‘SHOULDER SOCKET HINDRANCE TO FEMININ E RACKET WIELDERS IFA SMALL AND PALMER WIN AT ist ’ om s The “lady of the. racquet and| ball” ts the belle of the summer | 18 Po jetta Wey season. | ~ Heal You'll meet her everywhere—not TH Jonly at the country clubs, but tn amplgl |the public parks, In the play a ty grounds, in vacant back lots, in| totem ‘ Ximball Palmer, | Small and Kimba ‘ a he two years took the d ns pterscholastic cup to Franklin h for the semifinals in the Firloch journament at en by winning from the cracks, Drs. 5 pl and 06, 7-5. he ie ch was hard ge spectacular tenn!s dis Heeehigh school bors fought and played by atured the gainst them bt an up mi pmes and match. Ppour teams remain in the dow Laizure and Anderson 4 ffed by beating Coffin and Phillip $! and Fulton stepped up gaoteh by taking rd and Har a od Howard and down the line. ‘ fore qualified Monday 7 Penald Burke, the 14-year-old lad Febose sensational tennis has been Sta! feature of the tournament, lost to ¢2, 6 Ladies’ Singles Stafford def 1 Mrs 2. Miss Livingstone Goodfellow, 6-2, 61 Men's Singles defeated Howard Smith defested Miw $2 Pulton defeated Burke, Men's Doubles | and Anderson defeated fin and Phillip, 6-0, Russel! Fulton defeated Stafford and , 64, Miss 6-2, 63 O-YI* THERE'S GENERALLY | 50 S WRONG WITH THE | GLY WHO HASN'T A KINOLY | FEELING FoR Doss! | | | 1} | | | || | MU LUD | OHIO METHOD IN, __ DENTISTRY _ilissing teeth are replaced by © Method by artificial teeth are natural as your original inations are now being Without charge, and est!- are furnished in all cases STAND BACK OF OUR WORK 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE Set of Teeth, Ges «0 $10 Set of Teeth, Guaranteed .. Solid Gold or $5 in Crown ... $4 : Gold or Porcelain f his Bridge Work ........ --B1_Up i Gold Fillings 4 co 50¢ Fillings tt ‘Otice Hours, $:20 to 6. Sundays, 9 to 12, J OHIO i" 207 UNIVERSITY ST. CORNER SECOND AVE. EXCURSIONS -DAILY— PS. Navy Yard pote How's Ride on 1 Puget pee Cr) Bey gE $8 a | Schnetder Harmon, 6-3, 6-1 Smal! and Palmer| defeated Dr, Splodel and Dr, Fiset, side streets as well asx {n private} DER SOCKE courts on the boulevards. ‘Igh 8 fety” no longer has a 6-1, 06, 7-5. mortgage on the good game ten Titers Gunes |nie. It's every woman's game, and 4:80—Fulton vs, Anderson, Rus-| most every woman, and just sell va, Mansel Smith, Stafford and | (OM) “ery girl you know, is play Stafford: va. Harmon and ,Tyler| "hg a’ WEN Toeee” “aie tore oward and Taylo 8 ‘ . we ea ‘ylor vs. Small and) men folks—-who aay that women | 6:30—Fulton and Miss A, Greene! vs Shannon and Lambuth | | Tn one of the hardest fought and best played matches of the tourna ment, Brownell and Bemta went down to defeat under the fast play ing of Morrts and O'Connor tn the third round of the men's doubles in the Woodland park tourney, Tues day. The score was 64, 0-6, 62 Morris and O'Connor won the first set but Bemis and Brownell evened matters by taking the first six games tn the second for a love set The third went to the winners, 6-2, Ross Williams, qualified for the fifth round by easily defeating| Clarke, 63, 6-0, He also, with Claire Shannon as partner, ad vanced a notch tn the men's dou-| bles by winning from the Leake} brothers. Miss Mille Pritchard and Jerry White put up a game fight to remain in the tournament, but lost two of | the three sets to Mrs. Hamilton and Latham Tuesday's results Men's Sing! Fourth round—Ro: feated Clarke, 6-3, 6-0. Men’s Doubl round—-Morris and O'Con-| Brownell and Bemis, 6-4, Canfield and Chamberlain | beat Lyman and Ferguson, 6-3, 6-3; | Shannen and Willlams beat Leake and Leake, 6-2, 64. | Mixed Doubles Third round—Mrs. Morris and Herrick beat Miss Keltner and! 64, 62; Miss Lambuth | and Canfield beat Mrs. LeBlond and Morris, 64, 64; Mrs, Hamilton and| Latham beat Miss Pritchard and White, 61, 4-6, 11-9; Miss Living-| stone and Shannon beat Miss Daley and Watson, 63, ¢2 PLYMOUTH WINNER In the first of the-intersectional games in the Church league, Ply mouth Congregational beat Ballard} Christians, 6 to 1, Tuesday night at| Adams playfield. Gulla and Stokke, | Ballard’s battery, played good bali| but had ragged support. Th: me teams play Thursday night at Lin coln park in the second game of| the series, ‘iitiams de Third hor beat 06, Duwamish beat the Seattle Crea cents at Duwamish Monday, 15 to 9. | AM GROWING FOND OF ELEANOR FAIRLOW (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) I sometimes wonder, little book if every one ts as dependent upon psychological conditions aa I. I get | on so mixed up when I try to fixure | 1) this life out on a material basis en tirely. I know that physically I am per-| fectly well. I have no aches nor an ca. as | pains, and yet I have no inclination |jooked surprised and happy jme with her usual ‘Confessions of a Wife smile. “I ing to get your dinner now, a "Have I slept so long am she T asked, feeling particularly rested and com- fortable. About four hours. I have been duty and back again to see you. ick has been here, also Aunt Mary, 4 you have had telephone calls lore.” “Dick, I want to go hom soon as he came tn again. " T sald, Dick “L to read. I cannot sew, for all the | want to go home, and I want, !f pos- reason that my sewing {s nil. for eatin sive me, mouth. food is tasteless in my AS | sible, to take Eleanor Fairlow with I do not care what they | me if I need a nurse.” “ft am afraid we can't, Marge You know she has not finished her I think, Htle book, you are the |training.” only thing which holds any injerest | for me, The habit of long years of | ne viewing myself, my actions and the | actions of those about me, of re cording my own speeches and the! ahi I could see that Dick did not want r, but I am determined that if I standing off in one corner and re-|need a nurse 1 shall have her, for ¢ makes me more comfortable than any one about the hospital. I 'STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1915. PAGE WILL NEVER BEAT MEN? | will never make great tonnia play-| der socket won't let her. ert—not that they haven't the Hut aside frem a little thing Ike brain and the muscle to make M that, the tennis girl ts a regular Loughlin, Daugherty and the rest/trump fn the game of outdoor of the men champs notice them.| sports, and, judging by the way Hut woman's great handicap on) she's devoting herself to the the tennis court fs her SHOUL-| racquet and ball this summer she'll 4 add to the great glory achieved Yep, That's it, Woman's shoul-|by Mary Browne of Los Angeles, rood socket ts deeper than man's that's nature's fault, not woman's the shoulder ball sets in too far re to permit the quick, “punchy” ean fr | non-ball service characteristic of he best men players. No woman say tho men critics, can ever play as well a8 McLoughiin—her shoul | who was national woman tecnts| champton, and she'll do, in spite of |her funny shoulder socket. % How They Stand %) | In the Leagues vA NORTHWESTERN LF x Wen. ° 4 a 33 as 2 CIKN Aberdeen Beatile | NATIONAL w ”» rT) ” Won 1 7 “a : 0 are ser} | New System Wet Wash beat t | Transportation Club team T 4 |night at Woodland, § to 3. Ho: |strom's hitting was the feature of ithe game. i Q.—Please tell me thru your col- umns of a good way to whip cream | have tried several times and it has always turned to butter. STAR READER. A.—It {s exsential to have fresh, cool whipping cream. Whip in a cool place with a four-tined fork or wire whip (1 obtain better results Q.—Please tell me how to stiffen! a white Panama hat after cleaning it. B. B. A.—Brush on the {nside with a thin solution of gum arabic. Many persons prefer a Panama when it is soft. Q—Until recently | had a young man friend. | do not believe in with an ordinary fork). Whip one kissing, and when he asked the Way with an even, steady move-i pravilege, | did not grant it. He) ment | kissed me anyway, and | struck him. Was | rude? K, M. H. Q.—After we came West, some A.—Not any more rude than the friends sent us our home paper for! man was The exchange seems 4 Christm it kept com-) fair, tho somewhat unconventional !ng for nd we su posed they were still sending It, as we had never subscribed for It. Now we got a bill for $12, and we) would like to know if we are oblig- ed to pay it. | should think if a company sends papers out after the subscription expir it would be at in both cases. ? GIRL SWIMMER BEATS BOYS NEWPORT, Ore, July 7— The swimming of a 13-year-old girl was the feature of the ewimming races In the Inde pendence day celebration. An event for girls was planned on the program, but because there was but one entry, little Anna | May Hall, she was allowed enter the boys’ race. She won handily from her husky oppon: ents and finished four yards In the lead. 6 thru with th reconsider his outlaws and will not} decision. WALTER McCREDIE, Portla Class AA magnate, was at the Se-| attle game Tt ¥, looking for a| shortstop to take the place of Portland player, who earlier in the week. LEE MAGEE Is at outs with Benny Kauff, his star outfielder, | and, for that matter, the scintillat: | k t of the entire outlaw ctr- cult. A dispatch from Brooklyn ays that Magee is trying to trade {him to Chicago, but {f that fails | Kauff t play with the ok- feds or not at all. Kauff is under suspension for his conduct, follow- ing the McGraw fiasco. | CHARLIE SCHMUTZ, released by | Brooklyn to Jersey City, has been boug by Cliff Blankenship and will play with the Salt Lake Mor- ¢ wom “——~? | mans the rest of the season *SoneaWikePinnSTacsee tn rod JERRY NOWLAN of Wenatchee ae Bpokane 19, Vancouver § knocked out Alonza Johnson at AMERICAN —-Detroit eens ae Waterville Monday in the fifth at, New York ¢ Found of a six-round bout. The ' ati/men were heavyweights Y Philed . « YEDERAL 1 rk 7, Balt i ; z | COAST—Vernon 9, Balt Lake ¢ } | HOLD PIGEON RACES In the Inst flights held under the auspices of the Seattle Racing Pig eon club, birds owned by L. V. Greg son won the flights from Tenino, a distance of 57 miles, and Carl Bauw-| ena’ flyers led from Vancouver. | CYNTHIA GREY’S LETTERS AND ANSWERS out hurting her feelings or making her mad, Please inform me what will have to begin running it be- to do. LL. (fore Sept. 1, 1915, and would like A—You surely do not expect to know If there is any place in me to perform a miracle! It would the state we can learn butter mak- be as easy to stop the war as to solve your problem as you want {t settled Entanglements of this kind seem to be the common fate among boys and girls of your age. And many & most unfortunate matrimonial alllance has been the result. The only advice to give boys who have drifted into such a friendship {s to break off the af-| fair somehow, and take the unpleas ant consequences, whatever they) may be. For, to continue it after} the boy has tired of it, is bound to end !n much more serious compll-| cations, | Q—Can a married woman get an appointment for a government | you DAVE FULTZ wants more pep- per in baseball. All he need do is to make a suggestion to Ban Johnson and extract the cay- enne frém the reply. oe ROGER BRESNAHAN {fs clamor- ing for self-starters on his base run-| ners and Clarence Rowland is yelling for self-stoppers on his. You can't please any one tn this world 2 e MANAGER TINKER of the Chi- cago Feds is working a “new” play, a_double squeeze, says an Eastern i We over a creamery on a debt. ing before September. Yours and obliged FLORA AND NORA. A.—In the Scientific American Cyclopedia of Formulas, at the ref- erence room of the public library, will find complete’ directions and formulas on the process of} butter making. MISTA BONES, WHy Is IT | THAT A LAKE MICHIGAN | FISHERMAN |S NEv: | GENEROUS alee | the speech of those who give me the | benefit of their thoughts, s too well | formed to be lightly given up. Last night Dick again asked me if I did not love him any more. Since | have grown less demonstrative, |over at our apartinent think she likes me, and I know that | Itke her. When Aunt Mary came tn this | morning I told her about It, and she said she thought {t would be fine. “Poor Eleanor, Margie, will enjoy it She cannot Surgical Boot Specialist their own risk, at least, when you have never subscribed for it. MRS. A, G. R. position? Would It be necessary to take a special course of study to pass the f] | #itting beside me. {]| her face thru my half closed lids. |less talkative, he has grown more |help put miss he so. Poor old Dick, I do not think he is to blame because he cannot | take the loss of our baby as hard as | y I do For me the whole world Is a place | where I eat and sleep, and that ts! all. I want to feel, little book, 1) again, but some way I can't. I think, perhaps, if they would let | me go back to my own little apart- ments I would be able to get back to earth again. I said this to Eleanor Fairlow this morning, when she came in to sit with me while the nurse was out for her walk. My nurse fs a fussy person, who gets on my nerves so that at times | I want to scream, I don’t see why I need a trained nurse all to myself. I am going to ask Dick to see if I th: tr I think I am growing fond of| Eleanor Fairlow. At least with the exception of Aunt Mary, she annoys mo the least with stupi¢ questions about how I feel and advice upon “getting a hold on yourself,” and being “brave.” Eleanor yesterday, after I came back from the ride, came in and rubbed my head ghtly untfl I fell asleep. While she was doing tt she did not ask me if I had a niee ride. | Neither did she tell me I was look ing better or worse for.it. Instead, | she quietly took off my hat and wraps, and as I weartly dropped on | the bed, wet her fingers in toilet water and began to rub my head without the exclamations of “poor dearie” or “sweet lamb,” with which my nurse expresses her sympathy When I awakened Hleanor was still I did not open |my eyes fully at first, but studied | Eleanor Falrlow’s face, when she thinks no one 1s looking at her, 1s | |the saddest I have ever seen. She | | sat there with a tense look that was | ™ not that of despair so much as that of absolute lack of hope, I pitied | her, ttle book, for she seemed ro ie and | | ye PETES. B. Kennedy and Tourist ‘Test. € Iman Dock 6:20, 8:00, ing Kg & m.; 1:20, 2:00: 5:30 Dp. m. 1 Visitors Welcome Daily » = _ FARE, s0c ROUND TRIP in, & to 12, 25c, more sorrow stricken than even J I moved slightly, and immediately the look had fled and she bent over know her, hav her. want to be interested in things | aunt ) | 1013 THIRD Let Dr. Macy luxurious home here at the hospital.” “If she does, she never remarks I am glad I have learned to Aunt Mary, for I see I missed much by misjudging “Did you misjudge her?” was ‘ary’s unexpected question. Continued Tomorrow) (To = We guarantee 6 Lundberg Truss, inl to prove ft A. LUNDBERG CO. the supertority of and give free Trusses, Deformity Appliances and cannot dismiss her and have Artificial Limba Eleanor detailed to give me the 1107 RD AVENUB necessary care. KODAKERS— “In at one, at five they’re done” JACOBS PHOTO SHOPS Second Floor P.-1, Wide. BULL BROS, Just Printere «AIN 1043 Cure You Kuccematnl — trent- for By hroat, iB Over 25 years’ practical expert- A—The U.S. postal law requires | ciyii service examination? Where \Bence, Latest machinery, best m that subscriptions must be paid fn) can 1 obtain full information re- Mais. All repairing while yougy advance. If publishing firms send | garding same? ger age | t Phone Main 1068 out their publications after sub-|" 4 Married women may receive | scriptions have expired, or to non-| government positions subscribers, they do so at their own risk. 1023 Pike Street |Bopposite Winton Motor Car Co. } Q.—I am going with a little party of friends motoring at night, and| expect to stop at a hotel for lunch. | What should one order and who should order? NE. RE | |supper, after consulting you, and] A.—Your escort will order your |he will, of course, be obliged to |make selections from what 1s on }the menu. Let him know your |preferences. There 1s usually nothing appallingly «formal about an auto supper Drug Co, 169 r Second ‘ave. ronment phywl- ‘our ease and prercribe olutely without charge. want your patronage and of- fer you the doctor's services as an inducement. k for Q—I am a girl 19 years of age, and am keeping with a man 21 yi | quarrel! over many little things, as| we are both very quick tempered. Do you think that we would ever | get along together, if we get mar- The Dental War Is On” Please let me know soon. OLIVE. A.—The marriage ceremony can- FAKE ADVERTISING DENTISTS not be recommended as a great Dy EDWIN J, BROWN, D. D. 8. o Yellow Freat reconciler, It has no’ charm to make over hot tempers or clashing |temperaments, If you and the |man cannot get along in peace be- ob Dent ave, 4 pest fore you marry, you cannot hope : Adcertin. (to, become even neutral after the There are reasons why Advertis-| o. “ change ps ors. ling Dentiste are looked upon with | Wedding. Better change partner | suspicion; one in that there are some Junscrupuleus persons Q—I ama young man 21 and engaged in Dentistry have been keeping company with in this state 1 a girl over a year. | think a great me soany. times. tngt deal of her, but want to quit with- friends were fearful to come to me because I war Advertialng | Dentist 1 my prices were w. So, you |noo, there are disad- af | vantages In being an 9 PT, day | Advertising Dentist; | first, one must over: 4, Regular 100 mili leome the stigma thrust | of delivery, profit jupon them by the bookkeeping quack clan, aecond, the Bring bottle prejudice of well meaning people must again, the fakers even | try to fmitate my FREE ADMISSION §@| name, so beware of belves tho “hight. Dr. AT DREAMLAND Brown,” DANCING BVERY EVENING EVERY ONE WELCOM: | were devised for the protection of 3} women in primitty: The amount of spectal study re-| | quired would depend upon one’s | general education. Probably most | persons would find a little review | work necessary, Information in| detail can be had at the postoffice. | - | | Q—I am going to be a brides- maid at a wedding next month, at which the bride will wear whit Which would be more appropriate for me to wear, white or a color? G. F. A.—The bride {1s supposed to/ choose a color for bridesmaids to! wear. | Q.—My nephew and two of his boy friends are going on a camp- Ing trip with three young girls, | understand the party is to be un- chaperoned and expects to be gone a week or more. Do you think this proper? 1 do not; but would like some one’s unblased opinion. SHOCKED, | A.—It seems a pity that girls and boys cannot be friends aa plain human beings, just as boys and boys, or girls and girls may; but so long as girls must be protected from unscrupulous men, they should obey all customs establish- ed for their welfare. The very idea of such liberty ts shocking to all women of Amert can traditions. Owing to the re cent tremendous growth of city populations, social forms seem to be changing. But this is not so. | Young folks who suit their own| convenience rather than adapt themselves to the rules of conduct which would limit thetr social op. portunities, do so at their own risk Many social forms remain stable in the midsteof all other changes They belong to all nations and they are centuries old, Many | times, and it is Httle to the credit of man that these forms must continue to be observed, Q—We are two young women | Open evenings until § and Sundays untll 4 for people who work, Phone Main 0. who have put our Interests togeth. er, and now we will have to take ty | WHY, BECAUSE HIS BUSINESS. | COMPELS HIM"To SELL FISH! | In a thrilling ten-inning game, Covey Wet Wash won from the Re- tail Clerks at Adams playfield, 11 to 9. Batteries: Leavitt and Fine- gold; McQuade and McGillicuddy. | A @ [ELDER JONESyeritic. With the bases filled or with 1 kicked up aj}men on cond and third the batter | nice row by re-|bunts and two men try to score, | signing the|the man on second getting a flying | ' management of wing the runner home | the lau sliding in fgont o' | WN ng remov to this exten It was — | ty 4 om the Burns and I of the They couldn't keep it up. After {*) game, as @ re White repeatedly winning two games Monday Dug’s - et 4 be w late 8 Lange and Dablen hirelings dropped back into thetr| it thesis City | ork saigit cabal wer agen ge rut and let the orphan Victoria elub| Monday, Jones telegraphed his res-|4oned by Anson one day after Bill take them {nto camp Tuesday, 4 rape pect to President Ball of the) iverttt popped up a fly to the St. Louts Fed | to 0. In the ninth they tried hard! "zie magnate refuses to let him| Pitcher with the bases filled and no to tle and ed in putting t¥O/ quit, and, coupled with it, comes|!® out kcropa, but that was all, A lapse) ihe ‘announcement that President | me ee, wate of noodle on Hunky Shaw's part put! Giimore of the Feds has suspended CHICAGO LAD is a crimp in their attempt for further| phim indefinitely j scoring, The score Jones is quoted as saying he is| CRACK SWIMMER Abe Siegel, a 14-year-old Chi- cago boy, is the latest sensation in the swimming game. He {is lit- erally the boy champion swimmer of the world because no youngster near his age can touch his marks. His record for the 40 yards, using crawl stroke, is :1945. The world’s record made by Rafthel is 18 4-5. NEW YORK, July 7.—Jack Coombs will be back in the game again in a few days, according to Charles Ebbetts of the Brooklyn Nationals, today. The former Ath- letics’ pitcher has been suffering from a wrenched back. Give Yourself a Test If you can lay down a consistent saving plan, and follow it for | 52 weeks, the prob- ability is that you can then make larger plans and carry them to suc- cessful issues. | The first essential to a saving plan is deter- mination. Make up your mind this moment that you will save a certain sum every week at the Dexter Horton Trust und Savings Bank. | Then make good | your intentions one week at a time. Give yourself this test. It will reveal your possi- bilities. Deposits made on or before July 10th draw interest as of the Ist. DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS g Low bitte ee! | _ Canadian Pacific = Round Trip Fares East a Se. Padl. ... @ Minneapolis . | Winnipeg ... New York... -$ 60.00 -$ 60.00 -$ 60.00 -$110.70 Return For full inforn Correspondingly low fares to other points. Tickets on sale daily May 15 to September 30. mit October 31, Unexcelled service. General Agent, 713 Second Ave., Seattle. EERE EERE ee ® -$ 72.50 -$ 92.00 - $105.00 - $110.00 Toronto .... Montreal .... Boston ..... Liberal” stopovers. mation cal? or write —. E. PENN, Passenger Department. ragprees easoter anne ae a