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STAR—MONDAY, JULY 26, 1915. PAGE 7.) SHALL SHE TELL? .. THE QUESTION .°. .. THE ANSWER .° je | do A—You made the biggest mistake a girl can ever make. Pleane don’t think | say thie to make the wound In your heart still deeper, for all the sympathy In my being goes out to you. But It Is my duty to emphasize this point for the sake of Inno cent girls who will read this, and to save them if possible from Q—! cannot go to my friends with my trouble beca got wish them to know, #o | come to you, 1 have been married for three years to the best man in the \ world, and we have a baby girl a year old. { Mise Grey, | made a mistake when | was 17. | had a case of A WIFE tells Cynthia Grey how she sinned asa girl. She is married now. Her husband is a good man. He does not know. He does not suspect that the girl FE Mia g de i agen ody Bolg DH a bec Adele ' } i experience—to lead them into the path which Is ever illumined by the star of virtue. My girl, If | thought for a moment It would actually relieve you, | would not hesitate to advise you to go to your husband and tell him all, but | do not believe such a confession is the solution of your problem. 1 do not consider the mistake you made so great that, a noble woman, you cannot atone for It. You are unhappy because you dwell too much In an un- healthy past. It Is dead. Bury it as you would any other dead thing, and cover It deeper each year with worthwhile deeds. You have before you a most wonderful and beautiful work, that of bringing up your daughter into a clean, healthy woman— healthy both In mind and body. Can't you see that you really haven't the time to mope over a skeleton of the past? Spend every spare moment In preparing yourself to be a REAL mother to your girl. Gain her confidence and keep it, and as she enters the gates of womanhood, you will be In a position to gulde her over the place where you stumbled. Jove with a fellow who did not care. | fell, as other unfor tunate girls have fallen. He would not marry me. The child died, Later. | met a good man who really loved me and married me 1 did not tell him of my mistake, and Mies Grey, he has never found out. He believes | am @ good, pure woma ind sometimes when he klesee me and telle me how dearly he loves me, | could almost sereor because of the secret In my heart. Sometimes | feel that | should teil him. And then jain, tm afraid. I'm afraid of the way he will draw away from me in Oh, please tell me what to do, Miss Grey! Shall | tell nim reliev If of thie awful feeling? it le hard to have him belleve | have always been pure. And yet, suppose he will none of me if | tell? Your advice will be greatly appreciated, he took for his bride was not the pure, clear-eyed, white-souled maiden that he thought her. And now, when he kisses her, the guilty knowledge of it all sears her heart within her. “I feel that I should tell,” she writes, “yet I’m afraid—I’m afraid of the way he will draw away from me in loathing if he knows.” The Star herewith publishes this woman’s letter, together with Cynthia Grey’s answer, just as Miss Grey laid them on the editor’s desk. What do YOU think about it? The Star will be glad to publish some of YOUR letters to this woman. GIANTS WILL TRY TO EQUAL PACIFIC COAST RECORD TODAY Sarai ITS AVERTAKE (DESPITE SPECS MEADOWS WINS FOR CARDS\(scores AND) A WIFE. Maloun Epeed | DOBIE CHECKS wa UPs NINE MEN hie short stay there. More than one major league scout the leading pitcher of the old and is still up among | | N H M e | from a clase D Ie gue came a | pg, hes the torr lee of pitcher, went to it during his | % the Cardinal staff and of es Ht | pitcher to the St. Loule Card. | tablished repute were finding | daye at co! and wae - Wevaceias a ak ew | 9 Inala. When he was gathered successful that he had no trou. (4 SEVENT! | In the net of the St. Louls club | 't hard to get under way. ble In making his mark In the | First Game | many astute baseball folk M. PO. ed that Huggins, the little | Until a few weeks ago he was | North Carolina league during _ Meattie- an | | Seven of the stalwart young men who were important cogs In the University of Washing- ton football team that last fall won its eighth consecutive championship will be missing | when Gilmour Doble calls his cohorts together in a little over a@ month's time. The missing will be Gellatly, his seven-foot center from Wenatchee; Joliffe, | sub center from Lincoln; An- | derson, four years all-star tackle | and 1913 captain; Louis Sea- | graves, left guard on three winning teams; Charley Smith, quarterback for the past two seasons; Jack Fancher, on whom Dobie depended to fill the position made famous by Enoch Bagshaw, Wee Coyle, Bud Young and Smit! Tony Savage, reguiar end last fall. Amazing, wonderful, unbelievable, awe-inspiring, extraor-| , superb, astonishing, staggering! These are only a of the adjectives describing the performance of the Giants at Dugdale field yesterday, where from 2 to 7 » they twice throttled the Maple Leafs, made a clean of a series the second time in succession, won their) seventeenth and eighteenth straight victories, fourth consecu- | tive double bill, and so enraged George Kelly that he took m evening train to join the New York Nationals. The scores were 8 to 7 (14 innings) and 5 to 4 (7 rounds) Nothin’ to it! The Seattle club will make an effort this afternoon to the- record of 19 straight victories set in 1903 by the "Seattle Coast league team. A switch in the schedule brings )Vancouver here until Thursday, so upon Bob Brown's bold! band must Tealy Raymond unloose his zealots today, | hope of setting a mark that has not been approached in) i 1 ° 2 ’ 2 2 a 2 1 coverecesce™ © @ ov aweucome> 2 : ’ a ’ i ‘ ° ° o for Matis tn AB i i i att ae ! Tennis experts look for Maurice} | McLoughlin to come into his own again this season as national ein-| gles champion. | Bf twelve seasons |""McLoughlin Jost the title last| There is absolutely no chance of 7 @ Ajter winning those two games yesterday no one who by |season to Norris Williams, Mc-| ny of these talented huskies grap- ‘ witnessed the double victory will dare remark the Giants} | Loughlin went thru the recent Pan- pling ty sare y= at OR - | Things 2 bres » fo Se ama-Pacific expo tourney and won| football men. Anderson, Smith an ? oon. es flo oly seg day rede large! the expo mpionship, while Nor- | Savage have graduated. They will ‘4 | chunks. | Walter Mails floundered vadly in the ninth Inning ris was eliminated early never play again for any college. iof the first game, which to all appearances was won 3 to || McLoughlin is said to be playing | Seagraves, Fancher, Gellatly and when the last round opened. Before the G | —@| better than ever, while Williams is Joliff are embroiled with the faculty be three ie Vice bal acomnaioied ake Soa el HGureEN srnacut — |said to bo a littie behind his game | because of flunks and have already e ‘ : ° i ——@| of last year. | lost out. mF zg.) ~ the count stood 7 to 3 in their favor. Good-by winning streak! ‘ ——_—. “Bat the Goddess of Luck beamed]base territory. Hap scoo up the Tealy Raymond and right back/ball, tossed to Raymond for a force ame those Giants with four runs/at second, Tealy shooting Hansen gent the game into extra in-|out at first by inches. All after- Rose was warmed up rap--"0on they were pulling stuff like ané after filling the bases {n/| that. When you add to this heavy list the names of Walter Shiel, fullback and captain last season, and An- drew McPherson, right guard and WITH RED Sox CLUB @ good one, neither of whom is likely to return, {it 1s apparent that Dobie will be put to’ the severest A movie man is being carried |test since he started his winning coonmwownn el ermernnon od of the diamond and jolting|monium when they came back with| >e/M@ the only reason why he © for mirth and joshing, the Glamond, but eo far ae the mod. | Brown. Streck out—My Rose's, by Wil. | come back, Dobie’s problem with some heavy shots, need-| four runs in their half of the ninth wears them. which he minds not in the ern game is concerned he is | ea #2, by Dolce 1. Bases on balle—Ott _ SMOKER TOMORROW will be a much simpler one, for Managed to wiggle ah £ 1 i Fa over the American league circuit| habit on Denny field. Shiel is \- ti = ee ee ne veer Roy Brown has been hitting atre-| commander of the Cards, was with the latest fig | looked him over while he was f i ¢]0e.8, bert of the Boston Red Sex) working at Anscories aad hes ax- mendous stride here the past week.| getting kind of desperate in his Cote, Migs 16 games won pies {Rar a atenene roa Bast H $ &| Movies of the Red Sox are being that. ba witl got. be. back this Sait we inning he poled the ball} dotage. ang etghe-feet. —, - $|taken as part of a scheme of Jo- 4 Just to wwe they could do it ing th ach 1 i 4 ys There is a chance, however, the Meeoettes the Lette thees| bya Mh an tok cee roti ti cca The why and wherefore of Jests Don't Worry Lee bas wind ponte Re er ager re H $ Ep ae Figen ager < the wy |doughty fullback will wear a W in the first round of the second) game he rapped out a single after thie head-shaking and remark- The tatest addition to the Cardinal eseut, whe everiocked |Beoa. ct -. 3; 3 Tee Hes come ei: Hay t Pewee again in the autumn campaigns. ‘and another in the third, Se-| Hoffman had poked « three-bagger Ing lay in the fact the player sensations of the season is a the “apece” and considered only | Wiitiama b 2 6 Bas °| fn phim sind wiatee res Bow | McPherson intends to complete his retaliating with a lone tally|over Shaw's well ventilated dome.| “°'* 9!###es- wiry, rather slim youth of med- the fact that Meadows appeared |"°* ? => ee Oe ee aie baba ue Pe Miu |education at the University of the first, the result of one of/With any other ball club In the| Lee Meadows, Alias “Specs” lum height and weight. The plenty good ugh for trial 4S 38 6 “S]tures will show the Gox on every | chisan. He may change his { Smith's triples, and Butler’s|world, that circult smash would Lee Mead fact that he sport: with a major league array. Peon e,| American league playing field. mind. ‘on Barth's punch to the short/have been a knockout blow, but the| 4, Hie beng pasted Gives him an entirely different Delivers into the history of [vine 10 ee TERE feel — thant Shee paar 1f McPherson, who lives In and then pushed over four|Glants would not Isten to reason le weare those spectac pe appearance from the average baseball make mention that Gusmery: Thres-base bite—Smith 2. Bellingham, and Shiel, whose im one inning, shelling Davy|They refused to be beaten, and they| #7 off the field because he ball player and causes the Meadows ie not the pioneer ae | Moffman. Two-base hite—Smith, Guignt BOXERS READY FOR folks are in the flour milling from the turret in thelevoked the well known pande-| hae to. He needs them, that | bleacherites to discover in him | a wearer of spectacles on the frern. siien “tance maw, Stakes: | business In Spokane, decide to | to complete the demolishment Not only did he stick and le least. Those epectacies have safely that. | oe TI I faa: age A i then he would net have to re- the Victoria defenses, Final) Al! Bonner refused to be inter-| till sticking around the camp | been his adornment for so long ‘Ae to the danger of playing |iiome in 6% innings: bias tense] Billy Wright has agreed to make| construct hie backfield and his ‘was 5 to 4. viewed after the proceedings. of the Cards but, spectacles and a time as to be an ancient while wearing spectacles, it Je [Bolt "1% inings Charge defeat to] 106 pounds at 6 o'clock for his four.| !!ne ae well. With fullback and Sidhe: I nate nothing to say,” was his| all, he is the hurler to whom | story with him. He has worn not considered as very great. |Rese Umpire mccrore or © | ound bout at the Tivoll theatre to- quarter, missing, In addition to comment be ascribed the rather en- them ever since he w: ose. tended. rials : , one end, both guards and the Glants ‘ike m years mM. ir Stalin, of the morrow night. O'Leary, c jon ET Mey tare taving chutes Viable position of the tribe of | of age, and he le 22 years old | Braves coneidere that there le | carer MANEBALL RESULTS of Canada, will weigh in at the| best tackle In the conference, id got away with them easily: it| BOD Blewett was speechless. He| Huggins in the National league | now. hardly any hazard whatever, |2. (american) Checeent o's, piinnet! | same hour at 182 Doble will be sorely lacking in laughable. In the sixth conlea utter a sound. Words] race. | Not until he was 17 years old as It Is very seldom that « ball hin 1-4 Washington 3, Detroit 2. &t | Five bouts are carded for the| experienced men. His second of the first game Kelly and|°iuttered in his speaking organs. He started in as a winner | did he take much Interest In player le struck In the face by ee = evening’s entertainment. Charley| string material was not aver- Were racing for the plate| What he looked was deleted by the| this season, and was the big | baseball. At that time he start- | @ ball. 2-4 “(American Assoe %. | Ajax is directing the smoker, age last season. y one out asa ball Hansen |™*86ing editor. fie @, Cleveland 1. Ind a mile a minute was/_.,, eggs! om a 10, Columbus 4 Kansas City 6-0 a ap ar Tote ward tered ocly ers roezit” *"STANFORD WILL LOSE ONLY C4KORNIA TENNIS, osha? \ccs| ABERDEEN WINS |T'wo for One “Tm glad Bob Brown's team will be here By EDWIN J. BROWN this week, because every time we THREE MEN NEXT SEASON THE N. W. TOURNEY NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE TACOMA, July 26 —Eley, a Ta- D. D. S. beat Vancouver increases our hold ; Spokane ... _ co recruit, made a good showing, cn; Sakae eeabiee on third place. We'll give Spokane William Marcus and Van Dyke! Tacoma |: jtho defeated, 2 to 0, in a pitching! me to give two dollars’ a hard jolt, too.” Johns, two of the best players in |Sesttle .. duel with Harry Hughes. Score: | worth of dental work — California, will participate in the|yincosre® - ahendasa 6 9| for every dollar paid “Brooklyn 1s worrying over the Pacific Northwest tennis champion-| Aberdeen 1.1...” a tees 0 68 8) REST IN THE WORLD arduous tasks that Seattle is im- ships on the courts of the Tacoma : Rattertes—Hughes and Vance;| , $10 Gold Crowns. 85; posing upon Walter Mails, the sen- NEW YORK, July 26.—Oarsmen|keepste, taking third place the|Lawn Tennis club early next NATIONAL LEAGUE Eley and Stevens. sie x a a sational young southpaw recently |are still discussing the remarkable| first year and fifth in 1914 month. The tournament will start | pniiadsipnia “a a Wal -——— — 'Ricnmond. Crowns at » 47} 0; $10 Porcelain i: tee ERIES (2°28, 2.82" a "4apal best special preserv at anal tive Alloy Fills, $ “ “8 5, are set of teeth guaranteed BELLINGHAM, July 26.—By/to fit and faction, $7.50. scoring three runs in the first of ing guaranteed pain- the ninth, Spokane won the serles| jess and f ‘ A \ :|. My 16-year. jaran- from Vancouver, penne age ‘ton ha hada “an TEs If Stanford should win the Pa-| Avg. 2 and the Pacific States Lawn Brookiya FOURTH AND PIKE club,” says @ Spokane scribe, “and |S2owins of the Lelend Stanford) one “Coast championship in 1916| Tennis association 1s to send to| Owner Ebbets, who has an option | crew at Poughkeepsie. and return for another try at|Tacoma the players mentioned to of immediate recall, is thinking of| In finishing within a second and | Poughkeepsie, it 1s certain that the|compete in the singles and men's nding for the boy at once if Dug-|® fifth of Cornell, the winner, the | Cardinal eight will be given great-| doubles. dale and Raymond don't quit|Palo Alto crew surpassed any pre-/er consideration by their Eastern] Joe Tyler, the famous Spokane overworking him. Malls has won|Vious record made by # Pacific/ rivals than was the case this year.|southpaw, who has won a number 17 and lost 18 games already, which |Coast or Middle Western varsity) But three out of the elght oars-|of Northwest titles, will also be a 1s not only more victories, but | crew. men who forced Cornell to the Iim-| contestant {n Tacoma’s big tourna. | Boston -- Spokane .. “ more defeats than any other North-| Wisconsin rowed in 16 regattas |it to win will be lost by graduation,|ment. Hugh Kelleher of Seattle |Priet’, *:": 38-435 | Vancouver : S 6 4lpeatisels the were established 25 years, “6 ane Batteries—Fisk and Brennegan; under my ownership {i -488| Smith and Brottem, western twirler has sustained and|0n the Hudson between 1899 and/ieaving five of the present giant|will be Tyler's partner in the| Washington 1914. combination as a nucleus upon! doubles. New York eight or 10 more games than any fl other pitcher has worked. ‘ =. these yeh the eee which to rebuild a new eight. m. teoute $s sane sb tuts dE jend management 146 an of = eon: ooe,* aan | delp Harry Heilman, who with % . Walter Mails will never be a |twice, fourth four times, fifth STAR WANT ADS Seapine eee Ba Try dnd arth wecters: lonute [NOT “Sa” BUT «EDWIN J.” BROWN big leaguer if he acts like he |three times and sixth three times. BRING RESULTS FEDERAL LEAGUE }elub in 1913, was supposed to be 718 First Ave, Uston Block did in the ninth inning yester- Their closest finish was in 1899, FREE ADMISSION liens cig” é Wer. Troet Pet. |the property of Detroit and subject OPTICAL DEPARTMENT day. When Guigni, who has |when Wisconsin was but one and been winning games for Walter, |a half seconds behind Pennsyl- miscued on Butler's tap, Mails vania, the winning eight. began to sulk like a spoiled Stanford's first appearance at child. After he had been taken Poughkeepsie was in 1912, when, \(® iY | | Ons out, Walter aggravated Frank |as winners of the Pacific Const | &™ to such an extent the pair championship, the crew competed | él | 4 almost came to blows. It would j|and finished last. ‘ ' be the best thing in the world In 1918 and 1914 the University | 10 METHOD IN| ‘or the boy it some one would |of Washington crew won the Far| Lom Ane it crown him, Fighting with um- | Western title and represented the * Bea pepe F DENTISTRY pires, quarreling with players | Pacific Coast colleges at Pough- | liveaen’.: teeth are replaced by who win games for him, and ae a, ore epitced by) gulking in the box in a tight SELL BALL CLUBS uit \—DAILY— gf EES SS | a at teo|to recall. Wonder if this means| 705 Firet Ave. Washington Bldg. a 40 46 |that Detroft has accepted Jones in-|_ Open evenings until 8 and Sundays Aan 5 bie s:$ 2 EE) | stead of Hetlman? If so, here is a geet Lg OOO She Se ee | Brooklyn 41 BO 4s1| promising big youngster that de-) pewaRE of impostors who imt- rr a 6/ serves, and is bound to get, an ear-|tate my name, just one door south 3 */ly major league trial, He is lead- of my offices. ay offloes do Rot face COAST LEAGUE ing the Coast league in home runs |fherry et; T am pea ea Ts Won. Lost, Pet. /and playing magnificent ball, | o 580 oe saa! ret eo ee os aor! 60 464 459 "Canadian Pacific s AT DREAMLAND DANCING BYEBY BYENING EVERY ONB WELOOME fre natural as your original} ®™° will spoil the beat arm Examinat! are now being and keenest baseball brain tn the world. Just one such after- } (without charge, und outt| 09," Just one such af CHEAP THESE DAYS | . ate furnished in'ail noon y y yn, | Going so far north that steamers STAN io cases. and even genial Wilbert Robin- eaVe from outside reach them only once 1 | Ww oun ares st ID BACK OF OUR WORK) on will throw Malls out. CHICAGO, July 26.—There are il | or twice thru the year, Mr. and Mrs. parents -. FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE AG Set of Teeth, ere Until he learns to behave, |two National league clubs that can $8 Walter hasn't a chance to make be bought for about half the price Arthur Edie, of San Francisco, left Seattle Saturday night on the steamer Victoria, bound for Little a St. Paul......$ 60.00 Chicago .....$ 72.50 i | Diomede island, Be : . . Bay sage pe 9g |the boundary between Alsska’ andi Minneapolis ..$ 60.00 Toronto .....$ 92.00 | Siberia. They are under contract Winnipeg re .$ 60.00 Montreal .... - $105.00 Porcelain Crown lto the United Sti b u of edu-| Gold Fillings .. 1.00} cacion to teach the Eskimos three|™il New York....$110.70 Boston ......$110.00 Silver Fillings. | years. Lay Atandaat, Ferme'we est! BOY 1S THREATENED | A strange man Sunday afternoon | LECTRO | stopped Homer Carmichael, 13, on | Alki ave., and told him he would Pa | ? F z é 2 i good in the big leagues. asked for them two years ago. It . As far as being overworked fs understood Charley Somers) $10 Set of Teeth, is concerned, Tealy is doing the | would sell the Cleveland American | Guaranteed boy a favor by starting him | Association club, switched to! Soli 2 - oftener than any other pitcher | Cleveland from Toledo, for $150,-| teen Gold or in the league. Walter has an | 000 or less. That includes valuable | sig in Crown See easy motion, and is in no |property in Toledo, where a fine) $10 Gold or Por 1 * danger of hurting himsélf. |grandstand and park are vacant, H ‘celain 4. Fielder Jones, and also Wilbert The St. Paul club has been offered Bridge Work . Robinson, whom Muggsy Me- |for a sum approximating $110,000, orl ili Graw says is the greatest de- Iso includes valuable land, es ii $1 Up veloper of pitching talent In the asa con Otis tours iv, & eeatare| see e's oune™gtewer | SAWMILL BURNS 12, Correspondingly low fares to other points. Tickets on sale daily May 15 to September 30. Return Hmit October 31, Liberal stopovers. Unexcelled service. For full information call or write E—. E. PENN, General Agent, Passenger Department. 713 Second Ave., Seattle, cannot be worked too often, 8, 8. H, B. Kennedy and Tourist | killed if he did not reveal the bid ; 9 to fale pest |Leave Colman Dock 6:80, 8:00, PAINLESS ing place of his father's money TACOMA, July 26.—A_ loss of) 330 m.; 1:80, 2:00: 30 p. m, | | The boy's fears prevénted his Cut-Rate BULL BROS. $60,000, {t is estimated today, wa Visitors Welcome Dally | telling his father, G. H. Car , Dentists stained when Frank Betchar FARE, 500 ROUND TRIP DENTISTS | michael, a grocer at 59th 8. W. and h Alki ave,, until late at night. und the A watch was set store, but nothing happ sawmill and lumber yard, one mile Children, & to 12, 26¢, ql 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. Just Printere from Roy, was destroyed by fire ppome Main 2101, of Information, tet and Pike, Opp. Public Market CORNER SECOND AVE. 1013 THIRD AIN 1048/ Sunday night. Main 3003, Labori: ple’s ventists,