The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 21, 1915, Page 7

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ACROBAT IS (Kids D BIG AID TO DUG'S TEAM Groundkeeper Leo White won a piche in the hall of baseball fame He forgot to fill a gully tn which Leo Me genter field, tnto Quarry, Tiger center fielder, som. grtaulted in the first round, while two runners sped over the plate, Giants collected another run tn fe first inning they didn't earn, making a wild heave to after a clever bit of fielding. result of these mishaps was a victory by 6-to-3 score, The record for the past week is out of seven. As Pop Arlett finally lost a game, the Glants did not profit by Frt- each day flits ik of reaching fi larger, for there |; within which Seattle must cut & seven-game lead held by No decision has been reached | yet regarding next week's schedule. to go to Ta- for three days, but there has talk of shifting the entire here, The attendance better tn Seattle. Tacoma have lost interest completely. is supposed BLGIN, D1, Aug. 21.—Barl Coop.) @ won the Elgin road race yester | im a Stutz, his average for the, miles being practically 75 miles hour, a new rson, in a Stutz, was Barney Oldfield, in a and Allen in an was fourth. De Palma led the first 50 miles, and mishap mishap forced him to with- at the end of 1 s National trophy race Satur- COP PENNANT THINKS FAWCETT Fawcett, sport! editor either Loe Angeles to win. league pennant, winner In 1910, 1911, 1913 i 1914, fourth or fifth. have no pitcher whe can| What's this old ball game com-|—Coloma, Mich. consistently except Staniey |! WILL TRY RE The) St. Paul Stove Repai & Pumbieg OF 3 fire back MUO UD HIO METHOD IN _ DENTISTRY le Ohio Method b; your original Examinations are now being D Solid Gold or lain Crown ) Gold or Porcelain dge Work ........ id Gold Fillings IGHTY JOE JAC STAR—SATURDAY, AUG. 21, 1915. RCH | Under the title, “The Days of | | Real Sport,” Briggs, the cartoonist, Art Pelkey. Have to show some-| JUST BABBLING ABOUT DICK (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) for all kind = me about her affairs.” furnaces. Water A and colis; ut} Was here tonight?” ed. have had a fit and you also must know that Mollie cannot talk to her mother about anything.” “I have never been able to un- derstand why «a woman always wants someone in whom to con- fid mused Dick aloud. “You about the only woman I have known, Margie, who was not always getting into trouble by tell- ing things.” |some day and see what you say greatly surprised if you have writ- ten it for your own eyes only, to $8 read what you have sald of life in general and myself in particular. $5 What are you going to do with it, | Margie, when you finish {t?” “T shall not finish it until I can |no longer write, and then, perhaps, if by any possibility he did, he SB iis I would let read you. | know 5 ¢ would be the most surprised, if not 30 to 6. Sundays,| the angriest man living. He would 12, ; 9 to JHIO | 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. 4 CORNER SECOND AVE. certainly be surprised at the pic- ture of me your leaves would un- Cut-Rate | fold. The woman he thinks he mar- ried is not the woman you know, and I am afraid he would not be very much flattered at his own por- trait as seen through my eyes and description. Attempting to effec raduate of one of the highest classed med! Lam a legally licensed ce in my prof 1 EXAMINE FREE DR. DONAWAY, 302-3-4 Liberty Building Union and Third, Opposite Fostetfice Office Hours, 0 a. m, to 6 p. m. Sundays, 10 4, m. to 12, KSON IS PU rive Middle-Aged Stars From High Spots of Tennis Map: BY BROWN HOLMES Norrie Willlame and Maurice How They Stand In the Leagues meteors over the tennis world, and followed by stare as Church, Johnston, Grif. fin and others, have cast al- most a complete eclipse over such young * Hoore by tonings NORTHWESTERN ASED BY CHICAGO WHITE SOX JUNIOR TENNIS TOURNEY SOON White Sox Have Chance for Pennant---Buy Great Hitter CHICAGO, Aug. 21,—Vistons of another pennant floating over the South Side ball yard came to White Sox rooters today when President Comiskey con- firmed dispatches from Cleve- land that his club had purchased Joe Jackson, slugging outfielder, from Cleveland. Jackson for years has been one of the heaviest hitters in the big leagues, When he first reached the big brush from the minors he was with the Phila delphia Athletics. Crafty Con- nie Mack failed to note his slug- ging ability, however, because of a tendency to “pull away” from the plate while batting. He was sent back to the minors and soon thereafter pur- chased by Cleveland, Immedi- ately he became one of the best batters in the country. He al- ways could field and run bases like a champion. For many years it has been a close race between Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker and Jackson for the batting leadership of the American strength to the White Sox and JOE JACKSON ries of pictu in which he will show 8 readers how he plays the game. Wiillams has mor BASKBALL RESULTS Hoston 1, Bt. Louls 0; New York 7, Cineinnatt 0; Brooklyn ¢, Chicago The claim was made up to only a few years ago, that a man needed to be about more to be a great tennis it wae said a star n to mature and settle, be: ie @ game in which in the great outdoor the photos he STRAIGHT STUFF By the Sporting Editor mous sidearm driv hand drive, the proper ways to count for a lot, Wililam Larned, for instance, reached the age of 40 before the title wae taken from him. Al- der, Wright, Ward, Hack- others were court kings when getting along in years. Williams, national champion, is only 23. McLoughlin was na- tional champion a only 25 now. and how he pestiferous “foot- 1, Daitimere « { That's the home to? Hank O'Day is given a job' of Ernest Koob, the youngster who! ‘umpire and fans cheer as he jumped from the college campus to walks onto the field. the St. Louis Browns and ts a pitch. | ing sensation. Paul 3, Cleveland 4 City 2) Minneapolis 3. © CALIFORNIA PREXY OFFICIALLY FAVORS | THE REAL FOOTBALL 21.—Dr. Ben should follow thie series by the first pictures will appear in The Star at an BEZDEK A PAPA Hugo Bezdek, coach of the Ore- the University of California, {n a} gon football team, in the father of If it had been a boy change from Rugby to American|he says he would have named It football, and severing of athletic) Gilmour Dobie Bezdek, in honor of relations with Stanford ‘draws a picture of four ragged, like measies in a kindergarten. | barefooted kids trudging home with st strings of fish fastened to their| it's all over the Federal league. ORTLAND, Aug. 21.—Sam Bel-| fishin’ poles. Some sense to that.| of the M. A. A. C., holder of! yee ‘World's indoor record of 12 feet ® inches in the pole vault, will) ipt next spring to break Mark) Fight's Outdoor record of 13 feet I4 inches, he announced yester- ‘ted in Newark, N. J Murray, Mathey and Fottrel! are little more than boys. of the Pacific Coast ie one older player still in the big light, but only in the doubles, where with the wonderful McLough- Wilbert Robinson says weight is Joe Cox, the heavyweight, in roar-| not a handicap Ing as tho he had accomplished | Weighs about 300, but bis Brooklyn something when he knocked out/ club has come up like a cork. BERKELEY, Aug. jamin Ide Wheeler, the/a baby girl. The New York Americans have been shut out but four times this; | There's a new town on the map’ season. | thing better'n that, Joe, } he Is coupled 1. of W. football coach tempermental girl, Better take this angle of the situation into consider- ation, as {t {s the most important 1 am truly in love with a young of all. Sup-|I never wear the ring if I can help| girt of 18, and | know she loves me she told a friend of tried to blackmail Dick, he brought} @Q—1! am sadly puzzled and will tle book, if husbands and wives|me home a handsome diamond ring.| be very thankful if you will advise It made me feel as though he were! me what to do. secret soule and see there what) paying me for having faith in him. ‘Great each a of the Maas peer a a pose Dick could see the disgust it, for it always says to me tha i, Unings and repairs; “She says she wants to talk to/have in my heart as I look at him| down in his heart Dick thinks every oe after he has been out all night. His| woman, ‘Why didn't she do it while she) eyes are red rimmed with drink and | bought. . want of sleep, hi# hands are un-| Why Dick, you know if she had steady, and bis whole aspect speaks could look into Dick's mind I would| vain, or perhaps obstinate, | asked for a little private conversa to me of a man very different from find that he is quite as disgusted! and then she takes a notion to be|my life if | did not marry hi tion with me, your mother would the one 1 married, very different| with me as I am with him at times. | distant to me, and at times will not, was And |I know he almost hates me when I! when he tries to make up with me| make him shoulder the responsibil- by sending me a little present of ity of his home and me. some kind, I want to throw {t in his| this lack of responsibility and habit of not facing consequences from his He don't mean to be fool- gle of the American ish or the least bit wicked, but he He seems to| does the thing he wants to do with- think that any wife will be satis-|out looking ahead. fied if he only gives her presents and lets her spend all the money /as though I were talking @ lot about Here ts gomething that Dick these days. I wonder what would happen, lit- could look frankly into each othe: “What did Mollie want?” asked | si Q.—For the sake of three little But that ien’t/ girls, | would like to know what to do. | had no parents to instruct me nearly|me and started out wrong. proud or people | lived with would tell mi By threatening to tak even his wife, can be|what wor | ok I expect, Mttle book, that If I crazy: and now | nothing. f$rced to marry a man He took me to a cheap and the very next rranged for me in porting house to make his living He planned to dope me known! and started to carry out hie plans; rs.| but | escaped and went to a lady k| friend's house and si from the one! speak to me. she took cne of these notions wi about a month ago and she hasn't spoken to me since, altho | know @ she still loves me, tionally makes this fact when speaking about me to othe At first, | tried to make her s by appearing deeply hurt by her| 9°t mone: manner, but this made her worse, work so | decided to remain silent and) ™an never gave me have done so now for a month, but) that never be-|to decide where he stands in my life | ghe is still in the same mood. As;™man whom | thought a good deal do| of, and we were engaged and |. When | told him al rooming hou day said he h she uninten.|for him. I never have been able to under- a It must seem to you, little book, care of myself. This About a year later, | met a young ‘erhaps, Dick, I, too, have to: I am just trying laced |tell things, but you see, I always lethed Sr attticten deck] |contide in my little book.” “Oh that is why you keep that) ‘diary of yours so jealously under) ted without charge, and esti-|!ock and key. I must read it all ies are furnished tn al! cases. }STAND BACK OF OUR WoRK/|*bout me. I expect I would be 12 YEARS’ GUARANTE Set of Teeth, sda MOET EEE Set of Teeth, nas EET EE has hurt me so muc' fore have I told {t to even you, but/and where I stand in his. after that episode when the woman ECONOmYy HA is not stinginess, but a duty. Save a little every day and to forgetting her, | could n | that. | hope you will tell me what IN LOVE AT 20. had signed yourself “In Love at 40” you might have! convinced me that you never could|Vorce, and | have had three chil- But you are only| dren by him, We do not get along a lad of 20, scarcely out of short | oro bs . ti rt t. By the time you are if v pga eg Mae learned that you) We do not wish disgrace to fall if you) on the little ones. (To Be Continued Monday) RRY DUNAWAY’S SHORTAGE $6,000 With an audit of the accounts of Harry Dunaway not yet completed, the shortage created by the mis- Is best to do. forget the girl. can forget almost anything, No one knows want to, and about the easiest thing| about my past marriage, and this! the rooters are confident that it will enable the club to grab the | bunting. amp Plays Game en ' R. NORRIS WILLIAMS December 30, 1903; 600 perished in the flames. The General Slocum disaster occurred off North Brother island, East river, New York, June 16, 1904. Twelve hundred lost their lives. Q.—Will you kindly tell me if a | girt is married when she is 14 years e | old, and her husband leaves her aft. ler three month | 1 friend 1 did/ comes his wife without cer | and a baby | baby got a name, even when the (doctor knows all about the case? and she has no man, and she be- ony, is the xcept 01 born to them, Kindly oblige A FRIEND. A.—From the standpoint of honor, the child is illegitimate just SALVATION ARMY TO HOLD SERVICES At the Salvation Army hall, Fifth jand Washington sts. Sunday, spe- Scott, provincial officers for the states of Washington, Oregon and | Idaho. | Farewell will be said to a num- ber of candidates for the work of for the training college in Chicago. The party will be comprised of the following: Cadet Ballington | Rogers, Seattle; Cadet Eva Gale, Placement of funds as ticket clerk at the Northern Pacific city ticket office, now totals $5,000, He is believed to have started gambling within the past year. WOMAN RUNS FOR SEAT IN CONGRESS Dr. Eva Harding, a ploneer in the woman's suffrage fight In Kansas, who announces her candidacy for the democratic nomination for con- he’s the first Kansas wo- to seek national office on the deomcratio ticket. the result will surprise you. You|™an Is willing to help support us. | best for me to do? cure a divorce from my your| first husband and this one, too? |have not seen my first Also, I advise you not to bank, since | left him, for | have stayed | Cadot Arthur «| at home nearly all the time. | first husband What is the best way for both my- |self and my husband to ‘get this) jcleaned up without any notoriety,|day began divorce proceedings Your against her husband, J. E., who) |is detained for the present at, on earth to forget is girls. might at least test your forgetting) What ability by making an effort to ef-) face the present one I shall direct the volumes to be! | burned unread.” $4) Just the same, little book, Dick] is the very last person on earth Interest Mf Per Cent too much on outside some people enjoy making fools of others when it comes to love af- If the girl has never told your face that you, it's rather absurd for you to take some one else's word for it. IT must say you easy to please if you could even think of spending the rest of your days with such a flighty, UNION SAVINGS & TRUST CO. OF SEATTLE and at the least expense? answer will be highly appreciated. are exceedingly Bes A.—You say your first husband ts He must have se cured a divorce from you in order! to make his second marriage legal, not, neither of married again GET IT AT EVANS’ Sed and Colum’ jupertority of thing for you and the father of your {children to do {s to state your case to a reliable attorney and let him advise you the best course to pur| Capital and Surplus $815,000 Sed and Union, ChungMee MEDICINE Co, 115 Yesler Way We have Chinese JAMES D, HOGE, President N. B. SOLNER, Q.-—Will you please tell m he Vice President and Trust Officer you. Pp je when burned and how many were killed? A. LUNDBERG CO, ‘Trusses, etermit 4107 THIRD AVENUB HOGE BUILDING id, where and how many lives| 'n the Heart of the Financiai INQUISITIVE, etianses and A.—The Iroquois theatre burned ers of men Seattle; Cadet Olive Scott, Seattle } (daughter of Colonel and Mrs, | Scott ; Cadet Stephen A, True, | Tacoma; Cadet Thos. Olivine, Ta- husband coma; Cadet John Gill, Portland; Ainsworth, Everett, My! and Cadet Jennie Conrad, who will again.’ join the party at Spokane. Mrs, Winnie Clinkingbeard Fri- the county stockade, J. E. is con- victed as a “lazy husband,” and tho Mrs, J. EB. is getting $1.50 a) day while he {s at the stockade, | she would rather be free of him. | |} They have six children Juniors of the Seattle Tennis lub will compete in the annual elty junior tourney to begin on the club courts at § Wednesday morning, and continue Saturday. Lawrence Brown, who was champion two years ago; Marshal Allen, who defeated him for the title at Blakistone field last Saturday, and Percy Chamberlain, Broadway, high school cham pion, are ente are in charge. NOYES CHECKS SPOKANE, Aug. 21.—Arlett’s spitter was not breaking right and the Indians beat him easily, 4 to 1. Noyes was steady thruout. Score: Spokane ; 4: 6 Vancouver coool 6 2 Batteries—Noyes and Brenegan; Arlett and Brottem. WHERE THEY COME JAKE DAUBERT. ED WALSH. BENNY KAUF. MINER BROWN. They all worked in coal mines before they got into baseball and bought automobiles. Judging from the records of these fellows made on the dia- mond, a coal mine must be a pretty good place for an ath- lete to come from. Brown, the three-fingered wonder, didn’t Jose that digit in a coal mine tho. He got his hand tangled up with a corn chopper when he was a young resident of Indiany. Irving Kantlehner, southpaw sold by Victoria to Pittsburg in the fall of 1913, has developed into a sen- sation, Kantlehner has gained con- trol and confidence, lacked when we lai leaps and bounds, but would there be so many taking it up if there wasn't any nineteenth hole? That Frisco scheme of selling stock in the ball club to the public ought to be all right if each one of the public that buys doesn’t sit in the grandstand and try to run the { The grandstand at Decatur, Til, \in the Three-I league is being torn ‘down and the park probably will be sold in building lots.—News Item. ANSWERS as much as tho {ts mother were never married; but according to law, {t would bear the name of the man its mother married, Q.—Will you please answer by re- turn mail this question: Is any game of cards called gambling? A.—Most certainly not; only when money is put up in a game of cards is it gambling. Q.—Is it a fact that President Wilson's oldest daughter has taken the veil in the Catholic church? if this Is true, how the church? Thanks for an early A.—Miss Margaret Wilson is not a Catholic, and I have heard no rumor to the effect that she even contemplates taking the veil. If such were the case all of the news- papers would contain the report. | cial services will be conducted by) ut) Lieutenant Colonel and Mrs. T. W. he told me not to Pp worry about the past. married him without getting a di- the army, who will leave Monday! BULL BROS. \Just Printers 013 THIRD «@AIN 1043 DO YOU KNOW BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor n Arancisco ‘ otel Guide Visitors mit and Madison next 4 Brown and Marshal] Allen BEAVER CREW ror | cown! a} me p| Tne | qualities he saw him. golf craze is growing by BASEBALL IN 1915 P. B. AND P, 8. it she isn’t In Seattle has the finest billiard parlor in the world? Come In and see. B00 to $1.50 Daily. Reduction by week

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