The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 10, 1915, Page 13

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JANTS IN FIRST PLACE A STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 10, 1915, PAGE 13, fST SMOKER | ‘TAfSEASON ON 1] TAP TONIGHT - -TONIGHT'S BILL ve. Valee—135 Ibe. va, Neff—133 Ibs, va, Howck——122 Ibs, ve. Davidson—118 Ibs. ‘vs. Mahoney—t58 [bs pest boxing card that has provided in Seattle In months pe offered at the Elka’ clud/ ‘ On the result of the events hinge important ow ts in the lightweight ‘of the Northwest as Johnny wil likely be matched the one who nnfkes the will weigh a couple of seis leas than Valse, Who ex go enter the ring at 197, to be tn as good shape up the mateh of his kman has been building for Vaise’s left jabs p which he usually paves the 7 a victory, . and Neff, thinks Nate at who is running the ae will put up as good a scrap Pink! and Vaise. Anderson sinly is a cleverer boxer than heretofore been credited by Seattle ring devotees. first Bout will start prompt 30 o'clock. Druximan says will be run off in record Pete Muldoon has been en- to referee. Pet. | oe ur a ue “as wo a? 297 $23] 496 | an 334 Pet si? us seo and was slammed on the jaw. | Cheney, | recognized Francis Ouimet. the star young golfer, ts a baseball fan thru and thru, and at times is & basdball player. Outmet is about as prowd of his work as a pitcher as he ts of his great feats on the golf links. He recently pitched and won a 13inning game. Oulmet lives in Boston and he'll argue for hours with any chap who hints that both ends of the world's series will not be played in that city, Ten onal ot . TENNIS TODAY | FOREST HILLS, N , Rept, 10, }—The East and t will meet jagain tn tennis today and tomor jrow, MeLoughlin will play Behr, Bondy will meet Pell, Johnston and Yee te r > me }Griffin will meet Williams and | Washburn, Williams will play] Johnston, Griffin will meet Niles,| McLoughlin and Bundy will face! Behr and Pell ‘JOE M'GINNITY BEATS INDIANS SPOKANE. Sept. 10.- Deapite the fact McGinnity was given wob bly support, he beat Spokane, 3 to while Pinkman should be 2, yesterday. Les Wilson's triple in| Assistance | HISOWN DOCTOR | _Barl J, Bassett, N. P. train din | pateher, was recovering Friday @ | Providence hospital from a near fatal gun acetdent which necesnitat- ed amputation of his left hand! TyLw | DARK: Testing a new rifle with a mush. i room bullet, Bassett accidentally V/A [discharged the gun, almost sover-| ing his writ. He was mile from | | the nearest road. He tied a fish j }cord about the injured member to! BY BROWN HOLMES | | prevent loss of blood and walked to} CHICAGO, Il, Sept, 10.—This }elty claime to have started the idea THEY PLAY ‘NS “THE GOLF ND EXPECT TO HOLD ON TILL END EASTVS.WEST |Chicago---A City Wild About Golf|THOSE BOSTON BRAVES HAD NAUGHT ON TEALY RAYMON D'S CLIMBERS The Boston Braves have nothing on the Giants, If you recall the estanding.in the Northwestern league on July 4, you will not have to be told, but, was interested In the Seattie club, supplied: On July 4 Spokane -ted the leagu loat-~.622; Seattie was in last place lost—.338, On September 10 the Se: firet pi with 81 won, 64 | with 80 won and 64 lost, is second. By the simple process of subtraction, the fact is disclosed that Seattle has won 54 g since July 4, foranaverage of .761. riod Spokane has won 34 and lost erage of 486, With these fact: what process of reasoning Spokane the better club. the fifth, a pass to Hoffman, and sammie lof public golf courses—places Levine's single were factors tn Ta MANN HITTING |Where uny man, woman or chitd | | 2 Keer i Ur, nove coma’s two winning runs, Low | who owns # golf club can play, iN 3 ne: § eh etal pat | ‘This city also claims to have| waa tnjere@ ta the seventh after| | more public courses than any other | | Benttis ABT WH. PO A catching McGinntty’s fly to left, and}, [@8te Mann recently made a more public ’ | | Smith, if Sie ee ae ar was carried from the field. 8 | triple, a doudle and five singles in| city in the country. | | Ragmoad, as ee ame as ake m MelG. COOres | tee games, This was done tn nine| This city had gone wild over the 4 ee Spokane «2+... vs. see 2 7 Oltrtps to the plate. He is hitting 8Me; men and women who work . + + te Tacoma Peeve 6 9 4) close to .300 for the Chicago Feds, | ard all day, hurry to the links in| 1 Me . Ratteries—Kelly and Drenedah: | on which club he is a pal of na | the evening oe, giey ey farsa a4 se McGinnlt, ftman., others get out o! at 3 o’cloe! : 468 G , fin A. SS ee 19181 in the morning and play before go- Schmata, p 2 Bele es ing down to a hard day's work thhate Nee War as aS | Golf, just like a disease, has its watiskovie pre oP a ee microbe; the person hit by this jl jgmesoters | ade ts es le i STRAIGHT STUFF || 2c mere iyt] As a starter of my probe into this if m, 9 golf craze business, 1 wan routed at fg =a ; 3 ; H ; Se oF grams }2 o'clock Sunday morning and lanes ea Re ae Ge By the Sporting Edit orf} |taken to Jackson park, one of the |iaren, i th 234.4 many parks where links are locat- igueae oe ~ : H H 3 : F jed. There were 54 persons lined tee B. 8) Geren g The Brookiyn club will start next season with just about as good/ WP in front of the little shelter com ay ton oe Smith, Coombs, Pfeffer, | }ouse Where a card bearing a num Totals iar eer ary ae te | AFUE } a pitching staff as any club in the league Cheney, Marqnard, Dell, Appleton and Malis are eight young men who pn the cirewit will make ft tough for any club | named in the order of their worth, Pfeffer, Matis, Dell, Marquard and Appleton Sl prevails among bal! players thatMalis will create just as much of a Sensation next season in the old league as Mammaux has this season.) Cheney ought to go better, and the followers of the game believe Coom son, because he no longer ts stole 30 bases in 155 games. combipation gets to working. gratulated in its choice of coaches for Queeu Anne and Rallard | high schools, tho regret t# felt that tendency ts |the men who were active Inst year | were not reappointel. Austin K man by winning the state cham-| pet.| plonship with the Lincoln team in 54/1908, and tying for the honors tn |1909 with Tacoma and 1910 with Spokane. ball squads during his regime the North End would make a clean sweep against present-day compet! tion. The material in those days was better, of course, for there | were not so many high schools. George Cole, a clean, aggressive }football player at Whitman and a leader of high school Ballard, where he has as good ma- terlal as amy coach in Seattle, tho »| not in such great abundance, ee wil stick to pitching here- MY Y YO Q HIO METHOD IN Batural as your original Examinations are now be! without charge, and ate furnished tn all cases. STAND BACK OF OUR WORK 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE Set of Teeth, $8 Set of Teet*, $ .... D4 Solid Gold or Gold or Porcelain $4 in Crown Gold Fillings ..$1 U Fillings re Mar Prediction that California will play an open, fast came is made by | | -— —_——_-———-o “Hope Stranded and Alone”: Will you please send me your name and address? 1 think | can help you. CYNTHIA GREY. —- ° Q—t! always read your letters and have a faint recollection of your saying that you would help a girt who had made the first downward step and who is in trouble. Would \you please answer this letter? ONE WHO WANTS TO KNOW. | A—Most certainly I am willing to help anybody in any way I can. Q—I am deeply in love with a | dear little girl who Is In love with young man. eee } Inflelder Joo Schultz, whom Brooklyn gave for Cheney, together! with some money, bit .316 in the International league Inst season, and | He will be shifted to second, Zim going |back to third. Bresnahan thinks bis infield will be O. K. when this ¢ | eevee The school board is to be con-jecritics who have watched the sev. Allen bas proven himself a capabie| body to make a long pass, and it fs | ' His basketball end base! marshall really has $32,500 to pay| boys by reason of threo years’ Sock that tie tee Nil oe ta ban | G@E> STANDS FOR tive, get a chance to rest between) 0 — |work as high school man at the! eames when they think they are EVERS turns on the mound, while the ten) NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—The Chi- |¥Y. M. C. A, ought to do well at _ ae WHO'S KNOWN nis pinyer is on the go and under a/ cago Cubs bought Phil Douglass, | ber is given each person who wants arn Py ate to go onto the course. By 6 o'clock I the pitchers wore | 1¢2 tickets had been given out At this hour there appeared a lit tle gray-haired m pout 60 years of age, who played In his bare feet At 10 o'clock there were 387 per sons in line. Has this city gone wild over golf? It sure has the lst would read Coombs, Smith, The opinion! New Tennis Rule Shows Game __ |! Not of Mollycoddle Variety |) same goes for Pfeffer. Some close! be will not be as effective next sea | By BROWN HOLMES to “stick” under pressure. Ability) to stick it out should be a part of} any physical test However, the rule is welcomed by players, even those who have shown they cam stand the gaff of a long, gruelling pace. And the rule maken | the fact stand out that this tennis business is not a namby-pamby af- fair The new practice in foree in ten nis tournaments of allowing players 15 minutes for rest just before the final set gives official emphasis to) the fact that the court game is not | the mollycoddie pastime many be Neve it to be. A lot of ball players would ex- pect to be nicknamed “Bessie” or| BS OE SS | “Gwendolyn” if they were cought | | laying tennis, but five sete on a) } clay court under a boiling sun ts a OWNERS DENY it more severe strain than a nine-tn —< ning bail gene. LIVERPOOL, Sept. 10,—In view The tennis player who goes thru) of the German claim in its note to | five sots gets inore action than @0Y/the United States that the com. | individual ball player, with the pO®| mander of the submarine which ye” | sible exception of a pitcher. |sank the Arable concluded the ves- ~ | Just a short time ago In a tourna-| sel was about to ram and sink him,| | ment at Kansas City a tennix match the White Star Mne today refterated | | waa called before betng finished | ten deel t j | because the players were ethansted.| leclavation that the eubmarine| O. Kd the mill. Seelng was be | The contestants had battled two and) impossibie the A | Heving with the commish. lu half hours without reaching a de jo the Arable attempted to eee | elaton attack her. | Jim Gilmore, Fed league prest | The average ball game lasts two! (oofbep tery d gt pours and five mines, oot se CUBS BUY DOUGLASS we | } eral squads, | thereabouts, each numbering 20 of) in action. The rugby hurting the men tn thetr work. In rugby it ts neces-| {sary to hold the ball away from the| diffieult to teach the men to hold| the ball jrunning. close to the bedy while| eee After making sure that William |for his $1,000-eminute bout be tween McFarland and Gibbons, the} |New York boxing commission has jetting their money's worth severm strain straight thra, with no| with Spokane tn 1913, from Brook- < . } AS “THE CRAB | chance for a breathing spell. lyn at the waiver price. Douglass | FIGHTS ALL THE UMPIRES | “The arcument has been mae that| pitched a three-hit gamo against] AND DONT GIVE A DAB the 1iminute rest period before a|the Phillies Tuesday, but watvers| PORTIC LENCE EXTENDED TO COLO IN THE HEAD Ganbdoat Smith has replaced Jim Piynn as the official trial horse of jthe ring. Any fighter who can't | beat Smith is assigned to the junk pile, where he belongs. lthe game of the element of abtlity|could not be withdrawn. | Iutely right to be happy. | | No doubt the man in the caso tichly deserves a good “licking,” but peaceful methods are always more effective, If you think you e Jean influence him by talking to|@ | him in such a way that you will not) | Petces Paid i |betray the girl's confidence, by all ms ; " = | means do so, (Corrected Gal! nf Beets, sack Q.—We are a bunch of boys and | fe ‘ Fenites 12-1h Bee [boy for her, and his people are very|giria who chum together. That Is, | cabbage Y onerving toma. fond of her. we go on picnics together, and par | ‘al lemona i box f sienee - ” \. pefr a na turnips eliow | Her love for this man gave her| ties together and meet at each oth: | gapetrale ans: Jobing teens ; 140 the strength to straighten up, and|er’s houses. Two of the boys of Cant Watermelon ; a she has braved the taunts of her|our bunch live In a boathouse. '8| cantaloupe, Yakima, 4b Apples ls wrong for the bunch of us to go| Jonathan . 17s |veed-te-be friends, and togay the 9 Out these Iw. the evenings and play] ie hint 180 @ 198 jisn’t a girl who has gone thru wit Sa New apples, cooking 1% @ 1.00 what she has who ie any more a/2"d sing and go boating and euch | Gravenstein Lane @ be good girl than she You, Miss| things without a chaperon? | Cherries Grey, must know ¢ it Is not THE BUNCH. Ground cherries, box a @ 4% easy for a girl to de as she has| A-—There might be no real harm | | ae i done and stick to it, and | fove her|i0 such a thing, and then again Grapes, Con Serene, green. a the more fer it, altho she has been harm might result, Why step far) Moor son om Walla Walla, sack se @ 65 las a wife to thie man since she has Hough ovt of the path of conven: | soculenerrion | Fotatocs jd tionality to warrant criticism? Local head lettuce, @ dow New spuds, red tee 01 [known him. | know she has been true to him in every thought and ‘deed, and until a month ago none could have been any better to her than he was; but he went away for a time, and since his return he seems to have changed. He never) mentions marriage any more, and) New spuds, wh BULL BROS, | Just Printere|: rate ieee 11s @ ol oranges ats Prices Paid Pred Poultry, Veal « ©.-—Will you please tell me how | ® much a husband ought to pay for his wife’s hat when his earnings) are $75 a month? Please answer at once. YOUNG BUSINESS MAN. A.—Not over $10. A woman with *Hatted for Brown tn the ninth Boore by innings 100000 006000000 Stolen base—Smith. Sacri- 3, Brottem, Cheek, Col- Morse to Raymond to Brook Giddings to Pitz simmons. Wild pitch—Colwell. Btruck out~-By Sehmute b, by Colwell 5 Base: on balle—Off Schmutz 1, off Colwell 1 Umpire—Jack Hickey BASEBALL RESULTS (National) —Philadelphia 2-9, New Tork on olktyn 1, Bot fummary fice bite—Gid well. Dou! Angele (American Association) fumbus 6; Minneapolia 9, Cleveland 4-11, Milwauk Co- Louisville 2; rr DOBIE LOSES BIG ANDY M’PHERSON Andy McPherson, big guard on the 1914 U. of W. team, who did not show much his first year, bas decided to enter Rush Medical | Wae not seen and hence that it was/school at Chicago, according to ad-! vices from Bellingham. This is an- other serious blow to Dobie. MISS KUBEY TO PLAY Addresses by Frank M. Crangle, of Diinois, and W. L. Gazzam, and a violin solo by Miss Florence Kubey, are announced as the pro- gram at a luncheon of the King County Democratic club at Good | fina) set in a tennis mateh will rob already bad been asked on bim and| Fats cafeteria Saturday noon. The | Seattle. public is invited, tie club is found in 559, while Spokane, In mind, it is hard to see n| ranged the “) | championship realizing no one these figures are Us, je with 46 won, 28 , with 27 won, 47 james and lost 17 During this same 26 games, for an writers arrive at Raymond | the conclusion that even if Seattie does win the pennant, Spokane hap Tealy Raymond deserves all the leredit for the showing his club has |made. He was the man who rear- club and made it of caliber. He took }men no one else wanted and in- etilled in them the fighting spirit that started them on the most re- markable climb in the baseball his- tory of the Coast. It was Tealy who, in 1912, took hold of just such a punk club as Dug gave him this season, whipped it into shape and beat both Spokane nd Vancouver out of the pennant. That spurt does not compare with that of thi season, howev And don't over- look the fact that Hunky Shaw, the best ball player in the league on the attack the / way he is going ; now, has had a | Breat deal to do » with it. Hunky starts more ral- \q | | lies than any one else, and he goes thru with them, too. Schmutz pitched good ball and deserved a shutout. His support was flawless. Rose will try to make it four shutouts in a row Fri- day afternoon. VANCOUVER FANS | SORE AT LEAGUE | That Vancouver critics are sore ‘at the Northwestern league is | shown by this statement from A. |P. Garvey, sport writer on the | World: “The Northwestern league might | Just as well close up shop for the remainder of the season, The at- tempts to revise the schedule to (suit all hands have been amusing. The directors appear to be able to jo anything that euits them, re | gardiess of results. The fans have come to regard the league as a joke jand the majority of 33rd degree fans are more interested in a sand lot game right today than the Northwestern league flag race.” { ABERDEEN STAR HERE Ted Faulk, the Aberdeen end, | who weighs about 170 and is just a little under six feet tall, is in He says he will enter the U, of W. Special Train TO THE SAN FRANCISCO EXPOSITION Saturday, September 25, 1915 v 1A OW. R. & N. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM AND another man, She has been going 4 to 6. Sundays, | with him nearly two years and is she is rt-broken. shopping ability can get a very | 7013 THIRD @AIN 1043 | Hons {ibe 8 ae |just the sort of a girl to idolize a| Other people have told him) good looking hat for $7. I consider ——— Bons, $4 Hoe: B man she loves. When she met him, | things that are not true, | know/a woman plain extravagant who Spring ducklings, over & if * esas Miss Grey, she was not a good girl, them to be lies, because | know the Dentists | bat he gradually won her heart by true woman in her would not per- pays over $10 for a hat which she probably wil! not wear over four or five months. FREE SOUTHERN PACIFIC UNDER AUSPICES OF |his love for her and his kindness | mit her to do the things they ac 207 UNIVERSITY ST. when she took sick and had to have lan operation. He paid the bills land has helped her as much as he could |ehe has not been strong Th foe about a year ago. CORNER SECOND AVE. > | 1 have known her since child-| piace. and know that dire necessity hood, the cause of her downfall. She | been married before and has a | darling boy of 6. Mer former hus- ‘band’s mother takes care of the ar=- Come Here Men’s Shoe Store 814 First Ave. cused her of. The best people in - the world could not make me be- CINCY’S BACKSTOP lleve she would go wrong again. She came to me for advice today, [not knowing | love her, and asked |what | would do if | were in her OCTOR: Call at the Hight Drug Co. 169 HELPS PULL TEAM Butter | FROM CELLAR | She feels that she can't | Washington st, oar Second ‘ave, |? wasaineten Pi have the ex-government physi: mery, bi 4 : thd nie oe Perce yi oa your ease and prescribe |» . Washington man she has ever love One of the main forces of the olutely without charge | creamery, solid pack .. ” makes my heart ache to Reds who into a t your patronage and of- Cheer Cincinnati got Demostio wheel . Seattle Fire Dept. Band To celebrate Washington Day, October 1, and Seattle Day, October 2, at the Exposition fifteen days; ° tae a remarkable streak and btepped out} feh Fou the doctor's navvic ” of the basement for a breath of} Leok tur the ¥ fresh r, was the work of Tom} —— Clarke, the catcher, suffer so. Would you talk to him if you were |, and betray her confi- |dence, or just keep your nose out lof it? | feel more like giving him Limburger ... iw Frome. hands tied and see the girl you love suffer, but the stffering Is the aftermath of indiscretion. A wom an always pays 50 times over for such a mistake. My heart aches for such girls, and this serves credit for fighting her way up as far as she has; but there Is) To ask the wife of an Indian little satisfaction !n half-way refor-|prinee to dance would be the most ‘mation, A person must live abso-' outrageous Insult conceivable, erlands, left Seattle Friday morn ing for Vancouver and the Mast He represented the king and queen at the » Francisco exposition for the three days allotted to Holland a good “licking.” | want an an-| Clarke's work in handling piten Young America |awer very bad. ANXIOUS. ors was one of the reasons Man | A—tI do not believe you could|ager Herzog finally got four twirh ote a en Bonet eqgeh «+ |help the girl by mixing tn the ers into winning form, hia cannon-| fair. Perhaps your great Jove for| ball pegs to bases cut thefts ° her makes you just a little preju-\against the Reds to almost noth Grill diced in haw favor. & o doubt/ing and he has been whaling the} thas reformed to # degree, but she ball near the .300 mark | ] Dertero “Weshinaten lis not doing right now to live with —_—_— | Sates Geena Oath. <t this man aa his wife without being } Straw, ton legally married. When a el, AU REVOIR, BILL Entertainment § *" trusts a man too much, she repeat . t =« — ed on what thi tel at now, f H h Mn ited to otand be witk|. William Van Rappard, minister 0 ighes | EY DEAD to the United States from the Ngth Merit | de EA | Funeral services for Bernard J | Casey, who died Thursday after noon at his home, 1811 Bast Spring st, will be held from Immaculate Conceptio® church at 9 a, m. Sat- jurday. Casey was 75 years old and a ploneer here. He was the father [of 16 children, one de Entrance 104 Pine a $34.25 Band music en route at st for the Round Trip. Tickets good for stopovers allowed within limit of ticket. ops. Special entertainment fea- tures at Tacoma, Centralia, Portland, Salem, Grant's Pass, Med- ford, Ashland, Hornbrook, Montague, Sisson, Shasta Springs and Dunsmuir, A Delightful Trip for Everybody. Come Along! For sleeping car rate OW, R, & N. Co, City Ticket Office, 716 Second Ave. Main 932 Si UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM S, reservations and all particulars call on H. L. HUDSON, Cc, M. ANDREWS, DFaP.A DF &@ PA Southern Pacific Co City Ticket Office, 720 Second Ave. Elliott 1256.

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