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STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. SEASON OPENS SEPTEMBER 15 How They Stand In the Leagues : t K. ON AMES ne at U The open season for hunt ARR POA B 0 Ing grouse and upland birds ike hae ee EM Jae will open Sept. 15, say Game ABS: ee > es i gly a handful of experienced| Warden Henry Rief, George REE gh a ae i it will take at least 14) Olson, attorney, prominently eb ae ae a ae fo dattle California, were in| connected with the Seattle ee: ar) the first day of football} Gun club, and Capt. Pays: Oe ee ek ae ot | vice op the U. of W. campus. Port warden, an ardent sports. Site) Ss £8 vm tbe nt outlook, It Is go- man, It begins to look as if un 6 e.. 6 fe bee tough year for the| Tanner's ruling that the » At, RM. PO. A . pues ‘ i i champions backfield men, Walter Noble, Bud Young, Me i and Markham were out ney genera |r ee wilier is expected Tuesday. If | Young can stand to have his me twisted and bumped, the * nm de of average Sar KR. Brown, 2 Fittest Smith, p MAJOR DRAFTS ~° TO BE SECRET SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14.- From all indications, little pub. Melty as possible will be the chief aim of the major leaguers during the drafting season, which opens tomorrow, owing to the eagle eyes of the federal league moguls who | have a habit of waiting until the majors draft promising talent and then of stealing it away, The majors will harvest an ex cellent crop in the Coast league this season. In addition to the a ak wil fs going to give Dobie = * Gonraga, Whitman r 9 one set will prevail, ia an almost entirely line of forwards must be This will shatter posstbil- deadly machine play that terized Dobie's teams tn years of success. California, Dodie must from Huot, Wirt, Murphy, Newton, and a couple of who bave not shown much He has no alternative. of a freshman rule jngton to use only men ‘pave attended the university jeast a year. It is a ques JOfe Clark 1, off Amith 4 Hickey Tacoma seee [Vancouver .. NATIONAL adeiphia Ph Br Tobie will have much | numerous players who will be lost /#* Louts Seagraves was out Mon-/to the Coast via the $2,500 draft camege actnna’ price a very choice collection al are ready has been purchased by the|New York . majors. JENNINGS SAYS WAHOO CRAWFORD HARDEST HITTER Sam Crawford, according to Hugh Jennings, his mana the hardest-hitting ba the history of pastime. Crawford certainly leads In long hits, and that fact goes a long way toward proving the truth of Jennings’ assertion. The question, however, is open to debate in certain partic: ulars. There are and have been batters who drove the bal! away from the bat with as much ve- locity im imparts, but who fail or failed to make as long hits because they do not give as much loop to the drive. Some balls go straighter, but the: haven't the combined lift an Impetus which Crawford is able to give, and no one appears to be able to equal him In thie re. markable combination. ft is not certain if he wil! to py this season, If & game tomorrow would probably be Hunt ends; Newton, Van de et and Wirt, tackles; Nobody gl guards; Markham, cen- . ‘Seagraves can play, Doble i switch Wirt to the side of center. Newton is wig sure of one tack! twins, famous all- x AMERICAN | Washington |New York 1 @fficulties with the faculty, pot turn out. Elmer played for two years, Ed an end. two ets = men from p groand up. ey have proven . in the past, and once faces Breokiyn ae . pe | Baltimore . PAST are ee Milwaukee eveland Kansas Clty 4) mt. Paul 7 Indtanapolie t any more than I can help after this! jconversation with you. He bas! voluntarily put himself out of our lives, and I think the kindest thing we can do ts to forget him utterly.” “Margie,” saét Mary polemnly, I can never forget Jack as he was! when I first knew him. Should 1} live to be a thousand years oid, I) lean never forget that beautiful) | time.” “No one wants you to forget that.) dear heart. Remember all the joy }you have ever had and forget the | sorrow ra “Do you do that, Margie?” “I try to,” I evaded, for, little book, I don't always practice what I preach. It 80 easy to tell others what to do and 0 hard to do !t yourseif.| However, I try to let people work This morning I had a little talk|/out their own lives, Mollie thinks | with Mary. that I do not use my Influence | Poor girl! Memory has comejenough with Dick, and yet, little) back to her and it is as Mra. Sel-/ book, in your somewhat limited ex win said. She seems to have for-| perience I'll wager you never knew Jack's unkindness to)@ny one that asked for advice that | gotten all herself, and only remembers the|really wanted it. He always wants! confirmation of his own judgment! |wonderful days of her courtship }and the happy time of her honey-|or opinion. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) MARY COMES BACK TO SORROW (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper | Enterprise Association) | [Cool agreeable, strong, light @urable. Made to properly mouth. They restore af moon. sypearanen, sensing | “It I had been better to him,” “ ebeeks Femovings she asked, piteously, “would he be ’ <ove ccaaet? Dr. Macy’s Der set, $5, $10 and $15. | “Why, Mary, you were not bad to| latest. most sun- Peer er ae “ constu netho and bridgework a spe jhim. (oO woman could have been| the quickest way house in 1889, 1891, 1903, 1905, 1907| Will be at Ottawa. |more patient with Jack than you.”| to reilef from uf ORALTHESIA | “But had I been a little more pa. ‘Our sew method makes all [tient he might be alive today.” orde ]and women | “In all probability you would be/ ear, nose, throat eee pases. Curl dead, my dear, and your life) cheat. asthma, tu: against his is incomparable. Jack| bersulon'™, | ih we hurt you, don’t pay us” e@onvince the most skep- Lowest prices In the city for! work. BOSTON DENTISTS 1420-22 SECOND AVE. Bon Marche mM 1156 In Present Location 12 Youre had begun to take morphine at college, altho none of us suspect ed ft. “Dick told me last night that while you were ill, after you were married and Jack stayed away. from the hospital, he had gone on a drink and dope orgy. He said that at that time he tried to help him reform, and the chief reason he had his father make that pecu-| Mar will was because he knew of) this terrible failing of Jack's, He) had an idea that Jack might re; YOUR VACANT ROOMS i bitis, ete, celal and disorders. You are invited to call for ad vantages of natu- and 1911 14, 1915. PAGE 7, E UP LOST GROUND---CLUB IS BA 'New Golf Champion Was Great Pole Vaulter at Yale in 1912 Robert Gardner, New Amatedr Golf Champion, Business Man and F ormer Pole Vault Champion of the Robert Gardner of Chicago, the new amateur golf king, hae been a champion twice before, altho he is only 25. He won the amateur golf title In 1909, and In 1912, ber am of the Yale track team, he was the champion pole vaulter of the world. Gardner \s the typical col- lege man with the typical col- ' spirit. He goes Into ev- erything with the idea of mak- Ing good. went =z Into the golf tournament, just complet ed at Detroit, as tho it were a battle and seemed ready to al- most ta into golf with th made him a gr go Indomitable aplirit that it pole vaulter down his life to win. and star runner and Jumper. He go after a min all-round athlete. His whirl at big competition w the national golf tourna He won, beating Egan in the last round. t, Gardin y that will live ai trol a BRITISH DEAD long a To win the title at the De- figured in everything with a lon to win and he plays game to the outside edge. Gardner was always a sort of first in it in 1909. He was only 19 then. Chandler NOW 381,982 LONDON, Sept. 14.-—British casualties for the first year of the war totaled 381,962, Under Secretary Tennant, announced In parliament today. TURNING PARIS, Sept 14--A French torpedo boat patrol has sunk a German submarine off Dar- danelies, said an Athens die patch today. The admiralty, however, has not thus far con- firmed the report. MEGLER DEAD Joseph G. Mogler, 77, republican | Sept. 14.—Commissioned to perfect |momber of the First legislature of 88 organization to care for wounded \the state of Washington, and during Soldiers returning to the Dominion, 905 speaker |Dr. Charles E. Doherty of this city the legislative term of | ASTORIA, Sept. 14 of a collision between 9 runaw car loaded with logs and a loxwst of the house, is dead at Brookfield the state senate in| Where he has been assistant medical 1895, 1897, 1899 and 1901, and in the | director in the Canadian service. He As a resuit ay ng engine at the camp of the Western Cooperage Co., near Olney, one m an is dead and two others are fn a hos- pital, seriously injured The deod man is Mike Raditch, Austrian section hand an W. H. Owens fs in Jat] on a charge TAP i san of impersonating an officer. He] Rentte we landed there on complaint of ©. E Willis,, room 803 New Richmond ho- tel, who says that Owens tried room, form if he knew that only by living a with you could he inherit his share of the property. Mary, Dick pin ned his confidence to you, He knew that you would certainly take Jack | back if he reformed. You see, how ever, he was hopeless, and we all know he {s better off dead.” OHI Mary's tears broke ant afresh. “How horrible that sounds,” she O METHOD IN) rririmed A Clean, Smokele “But it is true, nevertheless, my} dear girl. Just because a person ie dead 1s really no reason why he shoeid be forgiven for all the sor- feS Batural as your original| row and grief he has caused while minations are now being| living. Some hurts are too deep for Without charge, and esti | forgiveness, and these are the kind DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replaced by Be Otto Method by artificial teeth Use Coke ss Fuel—Deposits No Soot in the Chimney Nor on the Surroundings About the Home to A STAR WANT AD WILL RENT | steal $1 lying on a table on Willis’ Sites are furnished in all cases. |that Jack dealt all of us especially WE STAND BACK OF OUR WORK | you . | 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE | “You know, he threatened to kill $15 Set of Teeth, $8 you many times since his father's fanteed SES death.” “Yes; whenever he drank or took Set of Teeth, , cocaine, he always seemed to want nteed ° covevere to put me out of the way.” | $10 id G ‘Well, let's be sensible and try Zoe sold. or to realize that you are worth much vty lain Crown . more to the world, your friends and Gold or Porcelain yourself than he could possibly be Solid fe Work ..... to the world, his friends and hin ‘ili r \nelf, Personally, I am not at all in| td villings Y $1 Up | Sympathy with that sentimentalfy iy ale +504 | which asks one to give up a aplen did Mife and wonderful chances of 5:20 to 6. Bundays |i ottering the world for some worth 0 peda less being who would only prove a menace to all humanity.” 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. GORNER SECOND AVE. Oftiee Hours, Dentists |pu: it seems heartless to talk in \this way of Jack, w hen he can nev-| defend himself.” ier,e do not intend to talk of him ITH y of a plentiful supply of @eat on the coldest ur bin full of Coke you are assured Order a ton today—you'll be convinced of its ®.. uperior heating value—its cheapness and its clean- liness ° Soot coming from your chimney is a nuisance to your neighbor. Coke eliminates this trouble Selephone calls receive prompt attention WOOP SOO AOS SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY Stuart Bldg. ° Phone Main 6767 PRADA LADAAORRA COL LAPOR AAS } | | World golf tournaments are held. He w pitted against Max Marston, who, one up on Gard- ner at the 36th hole, drew a Perfect lie, two feet from the cup, Gardner drew a difficult tie. It was 1,000 to 1 Marston would win, All he had to do was push the ball into the cup and he could do it 9,999 of 10,000 times. He pushed the ball, It rolled to the edge of the cup and stopped, | Gardner, with a wonderful | show of nerve, shot his ball Into the cup, evened the score | and won when an extra hole was played. The new champion Is tall and ii He plays the short- it stroke on his irons of any player of note in the country. Hie foliow-thru and strength give him distance. He ie a jong hitter, and a rule his Iron shot rful. His work on the green ie liable to be er- ratic at times. Gardner |s a single man, in bur at Chicago and a member of the Hinsdale Coun- try club. CRIMSON TURNOUT CAMBRIDGE, Sept. 14.—The| first official football turnout at| Harvard brought out 78 men, who will be drilled by 12 coaches, twice daily until the university opens in two weeks’ time when| | over a hundred are expected. SNOHOMISH TOO EVERETT, Sept. 14.—Snohom- ish county hunters will be permit- HOTEL HELD UP; $65.75 TAKEN A holdup man, his face masked) with a white handkerchief, entered | the Standard hotel, First and Pine, at 3:10 a m. Tuesday, held up Ralph Owen, night clerk, and Ray) Allen, bell boy, and escaped with $53.75 from the hotel till and $12 from Allen. He used a large, blue gun to em- phasize his demands for money. After pocketing the money he ran west on Pine st and managed to elude the police who were sent in pursuit. RECALL DOHERTY NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C., has been recalled from France, GAS ENGINEERING CLASS AT Y. M. C. A. If you're tired trying to get ac- quainted with the engine in your auto by tinkering on it at the side of a road, you've got the chance to tinker a lot in a short time with expert assistance down at the Y. M.C. A. They're starting a course there Tuesday night on gas en- gines for autoists and launch owners. BOMBARDIER NOW HAS DOUBLE TITLE LONDON, Sept, 14.—Bombardier Wells, English boxer, has been pro- moted to the post of sergeant-major of the 20th Welsh regiment. FIRE LOSS $20,000 A revised estimate Tuesday of the damage done by the fire at the plant of the Phoenix Shingle Co., Jallard, places the loss at between 0,000 and $25,000, It is believed he fire started by sparks from a donkey engine. Claude Corning, 26, a fireman, was overcome by smoke, and will be in the elty hospital for several days. WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—The third pan-American conference looking toward peace in Mexico will convene Saturday in New York, tt was officially announced today, Ulness of Brazilian Ambassador Dn Gama caused postponement from Wednesday LET’S HAVE LIGHT Brooklyn ave, folks, having just had their thorofare paved, now want uster lights, A petition is en route to the council from residents ted to shoot upland birds Sept. 15, despite a ruling to the effect that the hunting season does not offi cially open until Sept. 16. The county game commission has so said. Sisler pitches a winner for the St. Louls Browns one afternoon, then doesn't have anything to do until next, when he plays first base, right center or left field. Of course, if Owner Hedges should get & load of coal in the morning Sis ler would have to put that in be fore dinner, THINK GERMANS SOUGHT STRIKE SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 14.-—- Vice President John Kean of the Longshoremen’s union, indicated today his belief that German money and influence had sought to bring about a gigantic dock strike to tle up Atlantic and Pacific ship- ping. “The men were given promise of large strike benefits,” Kean said, “and these promises unquestion- ably came thru German agents.” He professed to feel certain Ger- man agents tried to prevent sign- ing of the new agreement at Seat- tle, and he quoted President O'Con- nor of the National Union, Buffalo, N. Y., as saying he had received a direct offer from German agents if he could ald in calling a long shoremen’s strike. E. MARGINAL WAY WORK TO PROCEED All aboard! The improvement of E. Marginal way, the industrial highway paral- leling the Duwamish waterway, is to go ahead now without further de- lay, according to the resolution to improve, finally passed Monday by the council. The resolution was amended to provide either for wood block or brick paving. The cost of bulkheading and fill ing will be met by a county bond issue of $175,000, The county ts to decide the nature of pavement to be used. OPPOSES MILITARY TRAINING AT U, OF W. Denunciation of compulsory mil- itary training at the state uni- versity was made by Rev, Sydney Strong in Queen Anne Congrega tional church Sunday. He voiced displeasure at formation of circles of college men and honoring those who held degrees. He pleaded for a system that would point out class {nequalities with the {dea of leveling them FRENCH AIRMAN ATTACKS GERMANS DLY CRIPPLED European Battlefields Have Naught on Dugdale Field, Says Giant Boss Rut six games remain on the|proved Sunday he could stand the |schedule of the Seattle and Spo-|strain of a full game, and will likely kane clubs, as the season ends Sun another opportunity Wednes |day, September 19. Tuesday morn-| da ing the Giants were a game and a! The muscles in Hap Morse’s leg |half ah , which means that the| have knotted on him so it is pain- |Indians will have to gain that|ful even to walk, but he is sticking ground before the week-end to his duties like a true soldier. The With only three w men on|charley horse slows him up, tho, |the club, Tealy faces a serious situ nts him from fielding the ation, and if he can hold that lead he usually covers. with his crippled forces he deserves y Brooks has a badly credit for being the gamest Iittle| sprained finger, which affects his manager who ever | 1 to a Se-| fielding. attle crowd, Neither Barth, Rose| Cadman is limping badly from a nor Bonner. will be fit for service| foot painfully bruised by a@ foul tip. the remainder of the season. Jimmy Clark is wearing plasters Barth appeared at ball park|all over his arm and back from Monday with a bandaged paw and| strained muscles. an arm as big asa leg. He is lucky| Tealy Raymond's knee cap is |bruised and swollen, due to a fast ball hitting the limb. Charley Schmutz was nearly run over by @ jitney bus as he came to the park Monday. Tealy believes the car was driven by a man from | Spokane, in the disguise of a citizen pattie. The man’s racial char- to be out of the hospital. Bonner is suffering ailment or other, and bedside re ports give no encouragement. Even }if he could get out of bed, he would be too weak to pitch because of his confinement Rose has an arm #0 sore he can/of § from some hardly raise it, which will prevent|acteristics, however, could not be him from pitching any more this|hidden season. The only men physically whole are Guigni, Smith and Shaw. TIGERS DEFEAT SPOKANE AGAIN SPOKANE, Sept. 14—Ed Kelly weakened in the seventh and eighth yesterday and Tacoma won, 4 to 2. Meikle pitched good ball, but was removed for a pinch Eastley’s jaw is cracked, but he Princeton Looks for a Big Season in Football Princeton students and grads look for a big season for the Tiger school in football. Harvard, according to the ex- perts, will be weaker without Brick ley and Hardwick. Yale has only fair material from her freshman team, and did not have a team of/hitter, McGinnity finishing the stars last season game. Score: Princeton, on the other hand,|Spokane . Pie 6 1 has not lost a single player of) Tacoma ° 4 8 1 worth, and will have a new coach- Batteries—Kelly and Brenegan; ing system. Speedy Rush, the new| Meikle, McGinnity and and Hoff- boss, is a driver and is expected to) man. get better results than coaches who did not begin to drive until a week or so before the Harvard and Yale games, JIMMY CLABBY HAS THREE TOUGH ONES ON OVERSEA TRIP Jimmy Clabby has arranged for three matches in Australia under DRILL ATU’ MEETS WITH OPPOSITION President Henry Suzzallo, of the) University of Washington, gave his| approval Tuesday of a mass meet-| ing which has been called on the! campus for Wednesday night by| students who style themselves the | tudents’ Anti-Drill Society,” and| against the two years of military | against the two ears of military training now required of all fresh-| }men and sophomores. | “I believe every youth should! /have military training,” he said, “put I question whether the unt versity is the proper place for it.”| Issue Pamphlet | The agitation against military training, begun Monday when the university opened, with the dis-/ tribution of a 16-page pamphlet, ex- horting the students to “wake up!" and adding: “Get compulsory mil- itary drill—or it will get you!” has/ created a sensation. | Referring to the establishment! of military drill on the campus, the pamphlet says “Political Trick” “At the legislative session of} 1909 the university wanted an ap-| propriation—and to get it, it was/ found necessary to establish com- pulsory drill. A rider to that ef-| fect carried—and we got the ap-| propriation—also the drill. It was} a political trick—as most riders | are.” WHAT ELSE WOULD THIS PAIR SAY, EH? | It's the toboggan for the demo: | crats, according to two very con-| firmed republicans, Representative Snowy Baker's management. He is to meet Les Darcy, Australian mid- dleweight champion, in November; Eddie McGoorty, the American re- cently knocked out by Darcy, and Mick King. Tom Andrews signed him for Baker. Just as Chief Bender passes out, thru his release, Jim Thorpe comes back from the minors to uphold the race and gets three hits in three times up for the Giants. Title Insurance | | An exhaustive ex- amination of. the title from our complete title records is the basis of every title policy issued by this company. If our examination discloses a defect in the title, it is pointed out to the owner, so that it may be cured, and the policy then be issued. Occasionally an in- sured title proves de- fective. i Our uniform prac- tice then is to pay the insured, immediately the facts are known, without a moment’s delay or inconvenience. No suit has ever so S. D. Fess of Ohio and J. B. Rey * m 4 le itt, deerethig: of the antional re |{s luce eee been com | publican committee, speaking Mon menced against this day before the Young Men's Repub- | | ican club, | | company by a policy- holder. Washington Title ABSOLUTELY FREE | It costs you nothing to see me for counsel and ivice ONE VISIT WILL on that street calling for ‘em. yA} '4 18 PARIS, Sept 14.—French air forces are waging a terrific cam-| paign against German railroad gunc-| pjood disorders. | tions, to aid the men in the trenches} Come to me for reliable Wasser- | who are battering the renewed Ger-]™#n Blood ost, man assault. Apparently hoping to 802. idheste ‘Midi: | check some of the supplies for the| Union and Third, Opposite Postoffice. | Teutons, birdmen in flotillas attack-| Office hours, 9 &. m, to 8 p.m. Sun- | ed a number of these junctions] nda brWtnal abbas TAO LEONe along the German front, {t was offi cially announced. A number of bombs were hurled. LAW SHARKS MEET Quarterly meeting of the Seattle Bar association will be held Tues: | day at the College club, preceded | -—~ by a dinner at 6:30 o'clock, An @ LINCOLN amendment to the bylaws regard-||{Norotere, 2 im ing complaints made against at-||min. from princt torneys will be considered, Dr.| wn, Write Suzzallo will speak. | Liat OTEL #| iH ’ j| ‘la $1.00, 81.50, n Francisco AS et Guide Insurance Company Far Visitors OTEL ROY ,°% 885 Kearny. LAMO INN 824 Kearny