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poasr ever had any ex with children? I've worked only ‘pest families.” Expected to Develop ffling Attack This Fall and Hoffelfinger, Yale pave adopted a system own, and, with the jest year in the they should play the football tn the East, w te the leader In the open » his attack undoubtedly will MIKE PLANS Bia OLEANUP AND ~TWEN FARM Mike Gibbons ts beginning to feel like a plute. “One more year in the ring, and then—me for the farm” is the way Mike ts talking these days. The former St. Paul tinamtth figures he can make a big clean- up in the next year, and retire with enough kale to run him for the rest of his days, That $15,000 Mike got for boxing ten rounds with Packey McFarland put the retirement dee in his bonnet. A few more purses like that, or even half that, added to what = already has, will fix him for e. So he's out with an announce. ment that tn the next 12 months he will take on Les Darcy, Jim- my Clabby, George Chip, Young Ahearn and any of the rest of the middleweights that will draw, and then throw y his gloves. gets her offense roll- of her strong opponents to be ped, Last year to solve a defense to sis attack were Harvard and/ 4 J. However, Hinkey will | esses that cropped | year. Heffelfinger should the line, and with good, there ts no limit itities of the open Kame. symem will be a combi. of Canadian rugby and old- football, which work beau- . It combines the) ‘of the open, spectacular the more compact plung:) Yale ts fortunate in hav-| ducker like Scovil to rip! t's line, The oppos-| undoubtedly will have to %s halfbacks on the defense the line to stop the gains ’ This should give en @ance to demonstrate the forward passing game. defense will find the en- sing their hands and fight- the line of scrimmage. always been the Yale styl gis a good one, depending on to break up the interfer. thus allowing the big. pow- to fight o: fer. aed stop all end runs. The so it is up to the) Yale back to the) | | } | ra nnn BY NICODEMUS NIMBLE “ten followers of football will i to hear that three Seattle fare making good at Gonzaga) , where Wee Coyle is in ‘The three are Abe Fine. Gallagher and Fred and Gallagher on high school teams , While Mullen attended Gallagher is No. 1—In driv: tee, place the iL om your $200 watch. If you get a good shot it | Will give you confidence and that's what you need in golf. ELEMENTS FAIL TO STOP GOLF You'd a’ thought the nasty, rainy weather Sunday would have kept golfers indoors. But it didn’t. At least not at the municipal golf course on Beacon Hill, A score were on hand before § o'clock. By 9 there were a hundred out, play- ing in the rain. Business was al- most up to normal all day. @udents and faculty to stick to the rugby to the American brand of ‘The statement says the was based on “preference students and spectators Baoglish game.” American| ft is said, “Is a coaches’ amd is quite incompatible) Sytem of spontaneous, are trying to es Stanford. 'WHAT IS YOUR wisest prophet cannot) MOLLIE SURPRISES ME GREATLY you in affluence or Enterprise Association.) of your earnings in @ jieve that after a girl has passed We recommend thru such an experience as I did depa men: 1o| With Chadwick Hatton, she will al- hy fe ways ‘stop, look and listen’ when another man asks her to marry agopend him. I was greatly surprised when Jim Edie asked me to marry him the other night.” @ Per cen: | NION AVINGS & UST co. CEATTLE to the Symones?” I asked “Yes; why did you ask?” swered. “Well, you had that rather ex- cited, triumphant look that a wom- an always has she an- I noticed you were keeping Jim guessing. He never took off you the whole evening not even ask me to dance, know Jim loves to dance better than any one else.” and Surplus $800,000 D. HOGE, President SOLNER, Vie President and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING a the Heart of the Financial ; District marry him. i" he wes in love with me?” she add rather wistfully Aunt Mary—he told mea Methods thal way to relief one he married, across the break fast table. shock,’ he whimsically affirmed.” Mollie's eyes danced with mis chief as she said: “How dreadful it would be, if clasped my hands ee | GOLF HINTS | from the first Pert! tomorrow’s SUN (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper, unless have) “Yes, I yap been | Yapeeen Aer} ial j marriage a ot lately,” repea' med yourself by putting viiiie, “but truly, Margie, I be- “Was it the night he brought you|* when a man has) been making love to her; besides, | nate, his eyes | He did) ings to cover this sordid fact with three, and tha and YOU! romance and ideality and to hug to day, as there fs enough gloominess with ™M¢/our souls the pleasing He that the |in the outside world without having “Oh, he does, does he? I'll have) to look out for you tf I decide to equcation we are giving our girls | devoted husband, as in the preced- “What do you suppose made Old them neither for Jim, whom I have known and loved | wives.” in a sisterly fashion, ever since I could talk, all at once decide that «where have you learned all this?” Well, my dear, I believe it Is because he thinks you are like your ‘I don't believe I could stand the | | |THE GERMAN DACHSHUND WAS Those 20,000 Germans Allies Cap | 'ABERDEENTO PLAY VARSITY — ON SATURDAY Don Hawley, coach of the Aber: | deen high school football team, which opens the season against the | U, of W. on Denny field Saturday next, writes that, while his team will be lighter than a year ago, | when it held the varsity to a 33. to-6 score, he expects it to do fully as woll, Five of the men on the 1915 }#quad won their letters, They are, | Pinckney, right half, who ts cap tain; Hobt, right guard; Anderson, right tackle; Ingebrigsten, left tackle, and Hugo, right end. Full- | back Kyle played last year at Cos mopolis, whence came Carlson Roth are big, powerful men “Kyle looks like the best high school fullback in years,” says Hawley, Left-half Breakison, another big fellow, played in 1918. Elliott was quarterback of the second squad a| year ago, and the center, Axland,| played with the Moose team last season. The Grays Harbor champions are coming here with their minds jmade up to do an well an in 1914, which promises a spirited fight | Saturday | j NATIONAL Phiiadetphta Doi Brooklyn innatt LEAGUE Won. Lest. Pet nr) “u 8 Chieage wv 48 s . Pd ° “ 196 LEAGUE Won. ” 7 " % Pet. Brooklyn Baltimore COAST LEAGUE Won « on “ BASEBALL RESULTS (Mational)—Cinetnnat! 4, Mrooktyn %: %. Lowle New ¥ 2 (Federat)— | Baltimore 0-6, Kaneas City 2-2) &t Loute | rake 1 | NEW GRID STAR STAR—MONDAY, SEPT. 27, 1915. PAGE 7. es © Packey McFarland ts back at his desk in Joliet, Ill, runoing his late = father-in- brewery, and it's up to Mra, Packey to decide if | the family bankroll shall be tn- | creased further by the big money Packey can pick off In the prize ring any time he goes after it. Pa y quit the two ago, It w then hi fiancee, who brought, about his retirement at that time That and the $260,000 in ring! earnings he had salted away. Packey Induced his wife to let him fight one more batt He named $17,600 a that would induce him to go ten rounds in a no-deciaion bout. Mike Gibbons was his opponent. They were so clever neither could dam- age the other, That fight sent the thrill of the ring again coursing thru his veins y jeFariand, Business Right, Hie Packey and now he's loath game again. Bot if Mra. Packey FRANKLIN NOT TO BE IGNORED The football situation at Frank- lin fe begtuning to look a little bet ter to Reseburg than ft did before the seavon started. Altho the loss Jack Eddy ie the name of a youth who may play quarterback for) | Princeton this year. He runs the! lteam as if it were a machine and handles a football as easily and murely as if it were a baseball. Coach Rush expects him to be a) sensation ' THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE to keep it within my soul. I guess! such joy is too great to last, for, al- tho I was heartbroken for a time after he had gone, yet eventually I |ceased to have that mad pumping lat my heart every time I heard | Chadwick's name spoken. My heart jgrew calm and cold again, and I to know that this tumult we | called love, and vowed was eternal, would have nothing to do with mak- ing fe with him happiness, or even worthiness | “I knew it was only the call of that old match maker nature, who, jafter we have answered with trem- bling limbs and eager lips, pays no more attention to us. She does Inot care whether we are happily | married or not, as long as we are mated. Indeed, she does not even leare if we are properly mated. “Nature's sole business ts to} and having done so, her | work is done. “It is left for us poor human be- | great Joy will last “I tell you, Margie, this romantic | We are educating sweethearts nor is all wrong. “Mollie!” I exclaimed {n horror. “From she | calmly “Why, Mollie Waverly, what in |the world are you talking about?) you,” answered | long | Never in my wildest moods of in- time ago that he would be afraid | trogpection and retrospection, to marry for fear he would wake) ajysis and philosophy, have I ever| up some bright morning and se@ &| pong go far as to voice any of the tutally different woman from the|fadical ideas you have been say- an-| | |ing to me!” Hut you have told me, just the same,” she affirmed with earnest- 1 a bf let bim marry me with that !dea, | NO I ( E! i and then should grow to be like s | - mother. You know mother bores ee cok Akay ie | ath.” mi sg lh I seem to feel that Ne: és vOR Co, | on perioriy of | ood old Jim would be a good man H st. — Boros 884 Kive tree | Hoe to, He Is a good deal older | airy genuine Sunnybrook full at re than I, of course, but since my |] oc; full pt., 400; full %-pt, 200% Ave school. days I have never cared |} qy) standard brands of wines and J) a | much for boys, However, Margie, Mquors at cut prices, do you think I would be perfectly |[ 4 1arge boities of Rainier, German content to jog along without any of Lager or Olympla, tee cold, 60c lthe thrills that come to a woman seuiaie: Wiest lwhen a man ceases to make des | perate love to her? = om ment don't believe I shall rer wo pr ormity Appi have that mad moment of absolute the mneAttitictal inde 4) ose that Thad when Chadwick BUL ve, | THIRD AvENUR | Hatton crushed me ng pire and le | + kissed me, It seemed to catch me J ‘ ogy NT, ADS WILL FIND| by the throat, Instinctively, 1 us? Printers , ARTICLES. across my breast 1013 THIRD AIN 1043 of Benson, the end, and Lea will be felt, there are plenty of men who are able to take care of the positions vacated. The first team will line up something like this Ends, De Bard, King, Kessler, Da- vies and Hickingbottom; tackles, Wood, Rumble, Kinee; guards Kyle, Quigley and Bryan; center, of the widespread | absorbing * has concluded to ly announcing Mollie's choice. fore, on next Monday, instead of be found in “Conf ons of should marry. ness “When, how and where?” “Well, Til tell you.” (To Be Continued) owe LIKES JIM FOR HIS COMFORTING WAYS 1 really think Mollie will marry Jim Edie rather than Pat Sullivan or Chadwick Hatton, as Jim Edte is the most light-hearted of the is what we want to- it in the home. I truly think Jim will be a most ing chapter of the “Confessions of a Wife” he stated to Aunt Mary, on her dying bed, that it was his first love, and by that you can see he hasn't been fickle minded. He was so devoted to Aunt Mary in her last days, and .was con- stantly at her bedside, it seems as though he would do as much for one whom he loved. My candid opinion of Jim Edie is, he ts just such a man any girl would wish for a husband, inter- ested In others’ welfare as well as his own, thoughtful as to other# comforts, and my sincere wish is that Mollie chooses him for her future partner, until death separ. ates them, BESSIE HOWARD, Snohomish, Wash, see PAT HAS RIGHT TRAITS; JIM 18 IN BAD, HERE Whom will Mollie marry? 1 think Mollie will marry good, hon- est Pat Sullivan, And If she ts the kind of girl she so far has shown herself to be, she will The reason I think she ought to marry Pat ts because circumstances point out that Pat has ¥ed a clean life. He comes from sturdy stock, before he was born, a8 well as after. He is good, honest and sin cere. These qualities in men and women are priceless, and are worth more than millions {n money. And as to Chadwick Hatton, He fe a weakling—but it fs not his ‘THE jan, at ighting Face to quit the]$268,700 he's made tn the ring is Wife” in the marr Mollie will make her decision, there- ing discussions of the serious step in life which she Is to take will Wite.” The Star are invited to write their opinions as to whom Mollie a eee! ** is Desk in “Joliet, ih, and, enough, boxing fans will see no says the| more of him Lea or Schroeder; Capt. Benson; halves, Burkeman and Bronton; Bronson, Townsend and brough. Conaidine, fullback, Chene- BARRY OUT BOSTON, Sere. ry may not play @gain this fall. He is laid up with a carbuncle. The life of a carbuncle usually ts about three weeks. —Jack Bar. Frisco not only produced the greatest tennis player, but came thru with a lad to trim the greatest interest manifested by readers of of Mollie, the writer of this wait another week before definite- today. During the week interest- In the meantime, readers of fault. He has money, culture and a life of ease, gained thru his father's wealth. But what did his mother give him? Nothing but “tempera- ment.” Too much temperament {fs simply an unbalanced condition transamit- ted to the child by a mother whose life was inharmonious, who was not happy, apd who hated motherhood thing, surely it can be plainly seen that this “poor little rich boy” had no chance, He was the product of # loveless marriage-—but he was not to blame. marry Jim Edie, a man who thinks “life a joke,” and “love a popular song. Men of Jim's type have | squandered their substance tn riot- ous Hving like the prodigal son. may be all right for the “father” 'to welcome him back and to for- give him, but the modern woman to marry bim, NEVER! Moille represents the woman of modern, enlightened times. And men who |sow winds and consequently reap the whirlwinds, find no favor tn her | eyes. ANNIE, M. BURGESS, Kenmore, Wash. owe SHE LOVES CHADWICK; SHOULD MARRY HIM To my way of thinking, Mollie should marry Chadwick Hatton, for she loves him and ha loves her, and that has moro lasting power than money. Pat enwrapped In the business ‘vorld he | would have but little time for her, and she's » home-loving girl. If Jim Edie thinks life's a joke, he would likely want to discard tha | song when it got to be an old thing, |as we do sometimes, and replace it} jwith a more popular one. That's why I feel safe tn saying jand he had some one to love him) C¥adwick is the one. | ROZE 2305 Norton Ave. * L, BRAITZKA, Everett, Wash. ° . | JIM 18 HIS OWN | HANDICAP, SHE 8AYS Mollie will marry Pat Sullivan, Jim Edie never was in the run quarterback, | WHOM WILL MOLLIE MARRY? If parental influence counts any-| I sincerely hope Mollie will not} It! Sullivan would be 80) : FIRST IN UNDERSLUNG MODELS tured Are No More Than Foam on the Stein} Will Packey Stick to His Desk or||(STRAIGHT STUFF Scrap Again? Ask His Wife By the Spor Look out for Yale this At New Haven, Hinkey and Heffelfinger have best material since Ted Coy’s championship team ihe of 1909, |map, swamping all oppone |than at any of the other la noticeable on first sight. Old Eli's weakness has been her) line. This fall the line promises to equal the famous 1909 set of for | wards, and if this September dope} holds true, Yale will not only be! | dangerous, but deadly. | | Capt. Alec Wilson, last season's quarterback, may be one of the ends, and if he is switched to that posi- tion, he will undoubedly become as famous as Shevlin, Kilpatrick and Bomelsier. Wilson is a big, power- ful man, fleet as a deer. Reggie Hutchinson, the best ath- lete Philadelphia prep schools have turned out tn five seasons, who) weighs 200 and holds sprint rec ords, may play the other end, There are so many good men for the wings, Hinkey is certain to |have a wonderful pair. For other positions on the line, except center, are 200-pounders, f. scrappy, ag- gressive, the freshman guards of 1914, Black and McGrath, already having displaced Veterans Waldon and Conroy. The backfleid is the real strength. Legore, fullback, has No peer except Mahan of H vard. He Is the best at evi thing, Including punting, ceiling to such degree in the open game it le idle to compare any one else to him. Mahan is a surer place and drop kicker. Scovil and Guernsey, the crack drop and place kicker, will play the halves. Scovil can smash a line like Wendell of the 1913 WILL LOSS OF "STAR DISRUPT CHAMP TEAM? When Percy Haughton lost Brickley last fall, football erit- ice In the East and several much farther removed from Harvard team. Cavanaugh, Dartmouth ch, says Scovil | is the est halfback he has | ever seen. Markle, the best freshman back in the East last year, will be hard to keep off | Waite, sub- coming wonder. remarkably accu- rate punter, . the scene BF action, predicted minus . Haughton, of course, will have a sreat gang, but he hi jost his All- American linemen, and it is these fellows who make the backfield stars. the Crimson, machine, h a Pe He made rcy fooled them, a shift or two In the parte and it waen't long before Yale learned Harvard did not nepd | se Ci ley and his educated toe, ly gg Fr St teeny rca s one of the greatest modern base- | coach neues Teoneraon Breed. | all has produced. Dick Kinsella, | w He has lost Clyde Coleman, | who was in Seattle longer than he sensational colored ane egy who, | wanted to be this summer, pecnwee for two seasons, gaine more of sickness, picked him from the ground than any other two men in/|Springfield club of the Threet the city. If he can develop an at- league. Snyder ranks among the | tack at enlaces gl best hitters in the anshe, con oe y lage as 5 , cat |need fear little from Lincoln and leet vain toe, pape pap rem | Broadway, for he has splendid ma and unerring arm. Snyder, in all i tors | bility, will lead the National| Sometimes the loss of a star de-| Propapitiy, i . moralizes a team. If —_ pe bunch back he wuld fanaa wecee plight than be. is now, The Cleveland Americans claim to with practically his entire line | have grabbed a wonder in Jim Bi wiped out. ‘by, from the Southern league, who |ning and can't get in, for he ts his! will, because he loves her with all own handicap. In love with M his heart, and it would be very gie, chilled with a sense of the hard for him to give her up. He coming autumn of life, uneasy un-| would make a very good husband der the stir of a long-dormant/for Mollie, because he is very hon- home-building instinct, what ap-jest, upright and good natured. peal can his suit have to virile, | While he ts not considered wealthy, clear-thinking Mollie? | he could provide a good home for Neither is Chadwick Hatton | her. mate for Mollie. Dreamy, intro-| Mollie certainly had a chance to spective, embittered rather than find out Pat's disposition thru her ennobled by affiiction, Mollie) work on the paper for which they serves as a foil, not a supplement) both worked. When Pat asked her to his nature. He is in love with) to marry bim she gave him good the dewy freshness of her youth,! reason to believe she would, tho Even now the fire is dead, the fuel | not realizing it at the time. exhausted. | When she found that she had She and Pat are kindred spirits! kiseed him back willingly she felt —daring mucly loving much, giving| Very guilty, indeed. much, Each has the memory of a If Mollie hadn't loved Pat she futile passion to steady them in| would not have thought of return- the serious business of mating.|!ng his caress. Yours truly, Trust level-headed Mollie to recog: pi he RUTH PAUL. nize her man in warm-hearted Pat. Here's to the pair; may their tribe | STENOGRAPHER SHOULD NOT MARRY HER BOSS increase! Am a reader of The Star and TTE HILL, | Stadium high school te: You flatter a dame by } calling a vision, but don’t ¢ call her @ sight. {1 take th lawfully wedded wife”—until meet my affinity. Paving Povihinin woman to be my ' al ting Editor season! Besides having most of the 1914 varsity and substitute players back, the entire freshmen eleven of | last season, which swept Harvard and Princeton off the nts, is fighting for places. The material, Eastern experts write, is so much better rge institutions, the fact is had a trial with the Reds in 1913. They says he pitches and bats left and right-handed, has a fadeaway as good as Matty’s, can cover first base and is a finished outfielder, hitting about .280. The fact that he once belonged to the Reds and was canned is a big boost for the lad. oe The big fellows are not white- handed. On the Yale squad are men who started eser insti- tutions, were rd of, and thru some agency arrived at New Haven. Braden, a back, came from W. and J.; Guernsey, a back, hails from some Colorado school; Robinson, a quarter- back, originated at Pittsburg; Van Nostrand, another quarter, was Westminster's old captain; Higginbotham was, a couple of years ago, all-star end of the South; Ken Smith, an end, be- came famous at Hotchkiss. Eligibility rules at New Ha- ven are strict. Players must maintain a certain scholastic standing, they must attend col- lege at least a year before com- peting, and they cannot play more than three years. But that they do not recruit stars we can never believ TACOMA GRAD MAY PLAY AT MICHIGAN TACOMA, Sept. 27.—A Tacoma boy is spoken of as one of the most prominent candidates for the quar- terback position on the Michigan football eleven this year. Nick Brazelle is the lad's name. Two or three years ago he played on the end. That year he earned his “T,” and after graduating he entered Mich- igan, where as a freshman last year he played end on the fresh- man team. So well has Brazelle impressed the famous “Hurry Up” Yost that the latter is now counting on him as one of his most Ifkely candi- dates for quarter, and Nick may take the place. However, if he does not he will not be disappoint- ed, as he will have a mighty hard field of players to beat for the po- sition and he has plenty of time ahead of him. Dick Kaufman Coast Leaguer Dick Kaufman will not pitch for Tacoma any more. After a battle with Joe McGinnity, Izzy was given his release, which he re- quested. The Vernon Tigers sign- ed him at once. Izzy has pitched good ball for the past four seasons in the Northwestern league, start- ing with Victoria. He is a veteran, American Cafe Fourth and Pike St. Amateur Night Every Friday Amateurs Apply to E. K. MAITLAND, 3 to 5 p. m. French Dinner with Pint of Wine, 50c . Vgrnon, Wash. Jtnink it is a splendid paper. Have been much interested in “Confes- sions of a Wife.” I don't think a stenographer should fall in love with her boss, and, as Mollie has been a stenographer for both Mr. Sullivan and Mr. Hatton, I don't think she ought to marry either of them. Besides, if Mollie married either Mr. Sullivan or Mr. Hatton it would break up thelr brotherly love for each other and cause lots of trouble, unhappiness and sorrow. I think Mollie ought to marry Jim Edie, He is a good man, loves her, is her brother's best friend and will make a splendid husband, judging by his kindness to Aunt Mary during her fllnesa, Also because he {s Jolly and able to give her a comfortable compe- tence. MRS. O. G., Seattle, eee HATTON SHOWED A YELLOW STREAK? Mollie Waverly is a very beauti- ful and intelligent young lady, She has three charming admirers—Mr. Hatton, Mr. Sullivan and Mr, Edie. She seems to be tn love with Mr. Hatton and Mr. Sullivan, but, as for Jim Edie, I belfeve she thinks of him like a brother, and it will hurt her to think he still is in love with her. I think Mr, Sullivan should be the man Mollie marries, for she has led him to belleve she will ac- cept him, and he has suffered enough for one man, He {s so hon- PAT’S THE MAN I think Mollie should marry Pat Sullivan. He has shown himself honest, big and strong. Hatton ts weak and temperamental, but capable of sacrifice. Jim Edie ts half in love with Margie. MRS, FRANCES BOYD, Redmond, Wash. ar) 8HE SAYS ALL GOOD IRISH MAKE FINE HUSBANDS In response to your query, “Who will marry Mollie?” please allow me to say a few words. I want Mollie to marry dear, pa tlent Pat. Jim Edie, no doubt, has gone the rounds, and associate with all sorts of women, Now he fs willing to lle down and be a good dog, Chadwick Hatton has been ac- customed to pampering himself, having every wish gratified, and wanted Mollie all the more because he thought he could not get her. Now that he is at liberty to do #0, the desire may not be so great, therefore it would be dangerous for her to marry him. But glorious Pat Sullivan, I am sure, woulg make a fine husband, as all good Irishmen do, FRANCES H. BAIRD, 1768 Alki Ave. | . THIS LITTLE GIRL ALSO FAVORS PAT I am 12 years of age and am a constant reader of “The Confes-|orable, for he could have kept Mrs. sions of a Wife.” Hatton's death a secret until he I am sending a letter on “Whom|had won Mollie, Mr, Hatton has Mollie Will Marry.” shown his yellow streak. 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