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SEATTLE MINTS ENTER FINAL IN LEAD OF INDIANS won, 17 to 5. started and week end was a disastrous Dale for the Giants, the Reavers then In rapid order came MoKenry, sing three games in the past aye Only the fact that the | Rept up their good work by! ~?) two out of three prevented | marth. tt . ABR HPO 4B results, The lead—one- | Raymond, os eA el Se ae : e e ‘ ° 0 rather thin and 9 S15. 8 8 Monday, however, and | Berks i» 2 ae a ie will have to be called | Morse, . yp ee GY oe a ae |Cadman, © aee 4 be stimulants to keep it/pst™ the Indians arrive Thurs-| servers” SES Bes 8 Seattle club could beat) wen ie ee. =f men with about five play. openen nee toesett %, ie wow 8 he ! field, and Tealy may| | Vancou re ty | uaa > . a ives 3 weak end for the Giants, | hrotem ¢ -¢ eo} Tyee tect that Bonner, Barth and | an Tp ‘ a | he Jald up at the same time | R. Brown, t 4 e < neither of the first two ee -. $ ® 1] es ‘ ° to be of much service ontil puts T. Raymond) up against it. He was call on Pat Eastiey Sun- ie -- Pat was not himself. A|' 4 Totals Rcore by Innings th “ ¥ & Two-daee hit it jaw ts no ald to pitching. one 2, Rey Brown. Sncriftes | on fellow would not have - ings Artett ttolen bases— Roy | rown. Double play—HFitestmmo R yoed at the park at all, but} ;mrTe ot ae — eo . who is one of the gamest the world, was pleased to ph Tealy gave him a chance. arm, swelled up as big has tmproved to such was discharged from tal Sunday. Tealy sald use him Monday, but Dr, Pegey was out of . Only time can fet what use Barth will be to fa the hottest week of the One fact ts already known can swing a club at-all he fo a uniform and playing Shaw, by Artett a, by Ariett & ley 1, off Ariett 1 Beatio-- Smith, if Raymond, se Shaw, cf Brooks, 1b Gutent, m . Moree, 2b Mur Struck out mute, p Melvog p Ducat | | cecesercenut? Totaly ‘ *Ratted for Morse tn ninth je bard as ever. The only|wors i 4 | doctor can keep him out of |Gitdings t> .. e} fs to chain him to the eee Hag “ *| Drinker, ef . ° Artett, If . Pa | Rose fs having trouble with |cneex. « oI ata time when he te most |B Brown, t . ¢| had been able to wane - *| usual, Tealy Schmutz in re- As tt is, he will on Clark again, and had only two days’ leave 1 4] : Summary; T phy. Roy Brown, Gutent Murphy Mein is not in shape. Rose |‘ look lke big leaguers | 22" s21, “yr ucnoure | ck Micke FOUR-EYED TWIRLER TO BE BUCCANEER Lee Meadows, St. Louis Cardinal pitcher, will not be the only apec- tacled ball player in the majors that on that day he next season. The Pittsburg Pt- ames ahead of Seattle rates have signed Carmen Hill, a fs apt to give Seattle 2) youngster of Corry, Pa, and he Bro’ wears specs, too Hill ts 19. He looked good to a scout who saw him pitching with n league pitching/an independent club and signed given a rude jolt Sunday |him to s contract to report next when the Giants spring. t The Indians are counting the the season ends and for an early fall of snow be C will be impassable. ernest s it with Se- & He caght to feel ashamed of when be looks back to July Do you know the } PIKE sr. LIQUOR Co. d 411 Pike Se. rend Sunnybrook full at i Pt, 49¢; full %-pt, 20? Mandard brands of wines and Wqpore at cut prices. bottles of Rainier, German of Olympta, ice cold, 50c. Why Pay Moret JIM SURPRISING NEWS FROM t EDIE (Coprright, 1915, by the Newspaper | Enterprises Aesoctation) I wonder, little book, if it Is be- | cause I look good-natured that peo- | ple come to me with their troubles and confidences. When I reached the hospital this J at rs ae. FRPTeT SS eee Sa }lowed only three hits in the first CONFESSIONS OF TLE GIANTS STILL HA Youth of 20 Years Becomes STAR—MONDAY, SEPT. 13, 1915. PAGE 7. the “Red Streak’’ of Tennis « WITH SPOKANE SPOKANE, Sept. 13.—Noyes al-| game, which Spokane won, | to 0. The second game went to McGin-| :/ nity, who was touched for but two blows. The Tigers scored one run off Keéfe. Scores First game~ Tacoma : 9 a 1 Spokane s 6% Batteries— Kauffman, Meikle and Hoffman; Noyes and Altman. Second game— TACOMA ....06+5 seoeees 1 6 8 Spokane . osee es oe S28 Battertee—MoGinnity and Stev- ens; Keefe and Altman. U. OF 0. LOSES VET Oregon's training camp has dis banded. Ray Bryant, Bezdek an nownces, will not return this season. | having accepted a government job. Bezdek must belld up a new back. field. He has Hollis, Huntington, Bob Malarkey, Lyle Bigbee, Mor fitt, Hoskins and others from whom pick, It is not known whether Parsons will return or no. Mollie and has told me he was go- ing to ask you if you thought he bad any chance with her.” Jim looked up slightly embar- rassed, but met my somewhat skep- tieal amfle bravely. “Oh, I know what you are thinking, Margie,” he said. “You are saying to yourself, ‘It took Jitn Edie a long time to find it out.’ I think, however, I liave al ways been more or less in love with Mollie, but whenever my heart would try to explain matters my slightly gray head would remark, “Don't be foolish, old man,’ and con sider the matter settled. ou see, dear aunt Mary and Margie, I am years older than Mollie and I think perhaps she will not consider me tn or a prospective} husband.” I looked at Jim from a new angle.| I had never thought he married or would ever He did not seem Some way would be want to marry. | morning I found Jim with Aunt Mary. Ever since dear Aunt Mary has been at the hospital Jim has |ealled om her datly on his way downtown. Almost always this has happened to be the same time that Moilie has . | made her call, Afterward Jim has H\ ) i taken her downtown in his car. \ IT} | Mother Waverly and Mollie have my | gone to Springs for a long ie stay, This morning dear Aunt ' METHOD IN| Mary seemed brighter than usual Bhan |As soon asIcame in she said, DENTISTRY |"What do yoR think, Margie, this | Y | boy Jim says he is in Jove with teeth are replaced by — ep OAS ITE Method by artificial teeth ene atural as your original tions are now being rere. " 7 mad Without charge, and esti- . U6 are furnished in all cases. ; D BACK OF OUR WORK) ne x 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE | Whoireals Dealers for - 5 Set of Teeth, $8 jeqetables and Fruit t. i 7 d 6 rf i bevecceooe | by J. W. Godwin & Co) l Set of Teett, | x. res ye * MO Solid Goid or | eyrses ‘0 | Cal, lemoi | Cal. erapefrutt | Cantaioupes, Yakima, 66 Crown .. or Porcelain old Fillings @o4 ee Hours, $:30 to 6. Sundays, |‘ 9 to 12. 10 50 om PRS Pa Sar neh ee Cut-Rate | Honey, : Dent: Huckleberriee --.- o * 27 UNIVERSITY ST. in erate sesenese gone IER SECOND AVE. American Yakima turn! 2eetasary | Turnips, sack 1 f] Fourth and Pike St. J Yitx"msswn 1B! Very Friday re s Apply to ee EK MAITLAND, cin me itu i rg aE es ry, Veni and Fork MARKET REPORT 2 @ lu 10 *@ “oe 100 @1 ie and Cheese | Laer eee. ” sa | Dementic wheel ...++- ” Limburger uu on triplets 16% 7 " i" ng America Melect ranch e— DOCTOR t Drug Co, 169 all at the Righ t ar Becond ave. ington at. t utely without We want your patronage and fer you the doctors services as an | inducement, | Look for the Yellow Front. | Margie, that sometimes a man gets | thing TIGERS SPLIT |HEY, HUNTERS! TAKE NOTICE Hunters contemplating spending next Wednesday in the game fields |will be liable to arrest If they bag| anything that day Fish Commissioner Darwin sald : tab th eatest the game ever! ™ PRR ccwr Moag- - about the greates' rr } Ton tree pad Just received 82) produced, was literally driven off) opinion from Attorney General Tan ner, declaring that September 15 is the last day of the cloned season, and that the season does not open until the morning of September 16. The season, likewise, will close the night of October 31, instead of November 1. The law reads that the season is open “between” Sep- tember 16 and November 1. MEEK GETS JOB Dad Meek, ti Victoria wreck- ing crew of 1912-1913, whose ca- reer !n the Coast league has been }uncertain, hae been signed by the Vernon club, as pinch hitter. Morton, Cleveland pitcher, has a new curve and Steve O'Neill, bis catcher, says he doesn't know what it is. That's not odd. O'Neill ha been catching Cleveland pitchers three years. very old to me, naturally, as he was no older than Dick, but it might not strike Mollie that way. Beca my love had come to me all opened that schoolroom door, I could hardly concetve the kind of love which would be of rowth. “Do you think that Molle has the slightest idea that you want to marry her?" I asked, rather abrupt-| ly, as Jim drove me downtown tn his car. “IT don't somewhat ruefully. “You see, I was not quite sure of !t myself un-| til lately. I wonder if you know, the marrying bee in his bonnet even before he picks out the girl. Well, I guess the bee stung me late in life, but you see, almost all my friends are now married and I am afraid that I felt the force of your good example. went and married Donna the sec ond time and started on a world’s tour, there is no one to play with me, lve got to marry In self de fense.” Are you sure you are in love with Mollie?” I asked, curtously, for this did not sound to me like « man who was head over heels in love. Yen, my - dear - sister-I-hope-you- will-be, 1 am all torn up over her, and why should I not be? She is the best looking girl and the clev. erest ‘Of course, I haven't much to of- fer her except a comfortable com- petence. She can have almost any. she wants in reason, Of course, T haven't nearly as much money a8 that man Cha@wick Hat- ton, and I presume that neither have Tas much ‘culture, but I have not as much temperament, and any women will find it diffi. cult to live peaceably with a tem- peramental husband.” You need not fear Hatton wife Is living In the tnsan Hatton's wife died his ylum,” last week Pat Sullivan told me,” Jim inform. | ed me solemnly, m (To Be Continued Tomorrow) NEW STANFORD GYM STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Sept 18.-The new Stanford gymnasium, erected at a cost of $100,000, is ready for occupancy. The old En cina gymnasium, which for years has been an undesirable landmark on the campus, has been dis mantled Reports coming from the O, A Cc. training camp indicate the aquad is the most aggressive ever representing O. A. ©. Light serim mage work has already been start- ed, augmenting running, punting, blocking and falling on the ball, h @ moment when Dick} slow know,” he answered,| Since Bill Tenney | WILLIAM JOHNSTON, THE |“RED STREAK" FROM FRISCO, THE NEW NATIONAL TENNIS CHAMPION, } | BY BROWN HOLMES For the first time tn the 34 years the national tennis championship has been competed for, the title ts held by a chap not old enough to | vote. | William Johnston, the Californian, who landed the crown by outplaying lthe remarkable McLoughlin in the national tournament, ts only 20, He j's just a red-headed kid, not long out of high school. | It ts almost unbellevable that a | boy of his age, with only a few sea- sons of play back of him, could land |the same prize other men have bat- tled for years to attain, Now along comes this Red Streak, a chap who has been in the game only @ short time. Jobneton, by his victory, has shown tennis ts a test of physical | ! |etrength, and not just a pastime|™ |in which the scientific man has the lode. McLoughlin, the man who beat and \@ame son, was regarded his feet by the younger Johnston McLoughlin started like a whirl- |wind, but Johnston met his attack and hen drove him so bard Me. A hiin dropped into a chair for rest between games. Karl Behr of New York showed several weeks ago that McLoughlin | Muffalc could be beaten by a man who would drive him to the back of the court, make him use an under-hand stroke and rob him of his play at the net. Johnston did just that, He made the game the kind of game he wanted played. He overrode Mo Loughita at every turn. McLoughlin and Johnston are |pals, Both come from San Francis. co, the home of tennis wonders. | When Johnston crashed the last |ball over the net, the drive th: gave him the championship, he leap- ed the net and threw bis arms around McLoughlin’s neck both were carried from the court on the shoulders of friends. Copyright 1 OT Reynglas”” Tobsveo Cor : —and now, let’s all join together and pack P, A. into our old jimm: makin’s cigarettes and sort or ei count of stock and have a ing. For, when you've found Neat thing to stay put and chii on the Road of Contentment | Prince Albert is sold foppy rad bags, Se; tidy handsome pound and half. it al humidors ~ and — that | erystal- glass humidor #0 bang-up fine—~alwaye! need one, aure! Winston-Salem, N. C, | \ | x both Brookes and Wilding In the Winner in Big Match BUndecided Philadelphia x ¥ mr fan Franciece Lea An ¥ Balt Lake City or r Then | Newark Loulevtile 4, #8, Paul 0-2 7 Y pipes or roll up ¢ bout and take bit of experience meet- your brand, it's a in-chin, for you're here in fine 100; “pow tin moistener top that keeps the rot en ha You'll R, J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO co, NEW YORK, Sept body knows who won bons - McFarland = te match here Saturday night, but the consensus of opini a iw would rob neit 13,—No- the Gib- n- round ion Is that her, Ref- tree Billy Joh said that had he been permitted to mak jon, he would have c affair a draw, boxing law forbids the decisions. Some newspapers Farland a slight a others says it was match, others think th Phantom had the better of it. The Tribune thought won; the Sun, h, Evening Sun decided the cont or 9 draw. Each boxer picked himaelf as winner, at the same time laud- Ing the ability and » ship of the other. pier megichese nn The New York Press, Herald and World thought McFarland led; the American, Times, T. © a decia- alled the giving of give Me- dvantage, | an even © St. Paul Gibbons and est was a portseman- | ™ ™ 7” u i NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww nat. Pot. | LEA w Louis eveland hiladelphia repr aness City rookiyn . altimore 5. COAST w - ernon akiand ortiand % New York 11-6, efalt Lake f-4 8, Portland 3-1 Ken Francisco 2-0 j—Kaneas City 6 Buffalo 2; altimor Gt, Louis 0-2, hin. ileal te? LEAGUE re $3 toot ) ‘ + GUE Lost “a “ “ ry Pet ean] 594] bao} ona) anal | | assistant coach or) VE GOOD CHANCE TO WIN PENNANT ° Three New Coaches for Northwest Conference Elevens This Season Charles Rademacher, new foot] that used to make the rest of ball coach at the University of| the conference wiggle a few Idaho, is the tot 4 he he years ago. Rademacher at ida- no, 18 on.the job, and he has @! 5° completes the trio of hard task ahead of him trying to] changes. All of them are to be keep up to Pink Griffiths’ pace,| sympathized with to some ex- Rademacher played four years on tent, for they are expected to the University of Chicago hold thelr own against teams % in 1912, Since t chosen from twice and th has been head of the physical de 1 number of students. partment at the New Mexico Milt Borleske has coached high tary Academy at Roswell, His as school teams, both in Seattie sistant will be J. &. Beghold, grad and in Portiand, so has an edge uate of the Springfield Training over the other two, for he h school lured several of his inte: “08 scholastic proteges to Wal Thr of the six Pacific Walla with him. Northwest conference colleges hie Steet will sprout forth with new foot- ball directors this fall. Johnny Bender was “fired” at Wash- ington Sta and the famous in, Dietz, Installed Archie Hahn was politely manicured from his job at Whitman, and Vincent Borleske, of the Lincoln High of Portland, was elevated to the big league. Borleske star- red for the old Whitm ms ZUPPKE LOOKS FOR ILLIN] TO REPEAT Despite the fact that three of his GIVES WORRY veterans may be declared ineligible because of scholastic deficiencies, Bob Zuppke, coach of the Big Nine} ©. A. C. TRAINING CAMP, New- lMnots champions, expects to shat-| port, Ore, Sept. 13.—Six 2 of ter tradition that championsh!p| preseason football practice brings football teams seldom come back In |to light the fact that development that conference, Minnesota having | of 4 substantial line and unearth- been the only squad to win twice 1D |ing of kicking material are first The three holdover coaches are Hugo Bezdek, at Oregon; Dr. E. J. Stewart, at the Oregon Agricul- tural College, and Gilmour Dobie, at Washington. These three are recognized as first-class men all ever the country. Dobie has never lost a game, and Dr. Stewart has lost only one since he joined forces with the Aggies in 1912. | Hugo Bezdek’s only defeats have ‘been close ones by Washington. OACLINE succession. problems to be solved by the Harold Pogue, who, it was re-|coaching force. Altho the back- ported, would not be able to play | field is seriously crippled by the beca of threatened blindness, 18) fajiure of Art Lutz to return to as as ever and Zuppke thinks | college, the presence of Billie Abra- he may make an All-American) ham, Yeager and Schuster presents berth. Potsy Clark, hardly less) hopeful aspect. Schuster played brilliant than the great Pogue, !#/at end in the big games last year, in shape. Jus Lindgren 18 #g810 | but is equally at home in the back- field. Ri esa igure 8 TA Laythe and Hofer, tackles, are s. A. 6. TENNIS the nucleus around which the line must be built. Dr. Stewart is comb- Fairness in handicapping hasjtng his squad for a pair of fast, made the annual club tennis tourney | heavy ends, and it is probable that of the Seattle Athletic club interest-| Hofer will be moved to one of the ing. Shannon a good chance to) extremities unless some good ma- win {n the finals if he beats Har-| terial shows up soon. Cole, discus mon. Stafford w eliminated by| thrower, a substitute tackle last Shaw Sunday results fee may also be found in a wing > Harmon defe 4; Pol- # | fora) One set of backs includes “Dark- liock defeats Beck, de: ; Stafford ms t, «488 defeats Burshem, 6-3, 6-0; Martz de- pied ipcerc cigs Billie, Bissett and " je feats Pynn, 6-4, 6-3; Shannon de- 3 feats Hamilton, ra ts aepory bv feats Kidwell, 6-3, ; Staffor e "TW |teats Pollock, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4; Shaw de- LANDS BIG BRUISER ve feats Martz, 7. Shaw defeats HH Stafford, 3-6, 6-4, 7-5; Shannon de-| Walter Broich, a 190-pound Association) on “if i) 4" lteats Hemphill, $-6, 6-4, 7-5; Hamfl- 414/ton defeats Coffin by default. . Jout record against the Vernon club guard ineligible last year because of the one-year rule, has joined the Oregon Aggies. He is fresh from the harvest fields. Brofch tore great gaps in the first team line last fall while playing on the scrubs, WILLIAMS BEARCAT Claude Williams, the Salt Lake pitcher who goes to the White Sox next spring, broke his own strike- It used to be said a club was no recently, whiffing 13. Willams {s| stronger than {ts utility men. This one of the best pitchers the league | year a club's strength is measured has developed in years. by the bank account of the owner. There’s a punch of joy in every puff of Prince Albert tobacco ! You don’t have to call for an en- cyclopedia to find out how P, A. sets on your taste! You just open up your supply, jam-full a jimmy pipe or roll a makin’s cigarette, strike a match and-puff-away! Because, you’ve landed on the brand at Jast that hands out all- the-time the fun you’ve always sought! The patented process fixes that— and cuts out bite and parch! RINGE ALBERT the national joy smoke among tobaccos is like a real man among men. You can make camp with it on short acquaintance! For it’s case-cards-facts that P. A. is the friendliest smoke you ever hitched to a pipe or cigarette. We know, men everywhere know, and you’ll know that what we tell you is government-bond-stuff just as soon as you loosen-up and ac- cept all this first-class, first-hand testimony ! We tell you our printed word has never yet struck within 50% of what P. A. will prove out! The heart- jest enthusiasm of Prince Albert’s friends does not overdraw the pleas- ure this tobacco will give you!