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Alex Pitched Great Game; Phillies Had All Breaks honor—far from it—but if the United Press Staff Correspondent. | Phillies had fallen from a balloon PHILADELPHIA, Oct, 9.—A new |¥esterday they probably would have landed in a mint or tn a dia) Me tcacr ork page ~ mond patch. They had every break. af As a game in which a real fan ei ebed for new could get worked up and drown, ape SO ORR: himself in a bottle of pop while! _ choking on a sack of peanuts it HILADELPHIA, Oct @ FRED S. FERGUSON Naughton ain't a play: But gentle Raoul ig THERE; and bland, in each hand before FERGUSON him {ip bis own bailiwick, and has ,sebdied the latest enemy, the Red long on the think stuff" His arm responded when hits meant runs, and the Red Sox were immediately cut off from all as he which he was nicked for eight hits, | while his teammates gathered only five from Shore. But these hits} were scattered over 1 hour and 58 minutes, and did not come more often than one in an inning. How Phillies Won j Also every ball that Shore served, and on which the Red Sox relied [to beat the Phillies, took the re iy Me Cifleria’ Breakfast ver and plucky m wasn’t the the scratchiest enough single, k ye th ort re f she made runs of them, toc lies exceeded the score of a homer soaring proudly into space; grounder and he never caught a fly earthward from the clear and azure sky; he's never in the coaching box to yammer and to baw! aughton, contest c As the Alexan was sik. é der of old led hir But as an example of what lesions over fields can be done thru the power of charge , gy a anlage fi one man—alded by the breaks 1H city team, and he surely “ 7 - he —it stands out as one of the a ail his initis aren oe | hee Tien” tiamais:. teatas of 6 ae Seaee for:in this inital He has mmumemmmng | Worid's series. Alexander is |p fair. When it comes to lucky His victory was not without ith pa rw. Y you got to admit that the Alexander won the game in/ whatever you say of the game and justly ¢ with the walloping bingle, turned little pop-ups to hits t MUTT AND JEFF—A FLAG IS A FLAG,*ANY WAY YOU GET IT. (Copyrtaht 1915, by WT, C. Fiaher, STAR—SATURDAY, OCT. 9, 1915. PAGE 7. ‘Trade Mark New. U. & Pat. oft) FoR THIG GLORIOUS DEED FOR THE PATHERLAND, THIS DEED of HEROISM FOR THE GLORY OF GERMANY, 4 PERSONALLY , DECORATE YoU AY & HERO OF PRUSSIA, wrrn THE TRON CROSS, Gy THE WAY How Dib You CAPTURG THE Writter for the United Press 9.—You find Raoul won't Naughton on the score card any place; he never sent he never scooped a as it hurtled swiftly in fact, young Raoul if you take him by and large, has the fortunes of the Phillies almost wholly in his he’s the little humpbacked mascot of the Quaker put it over” with a lot of vim and he the job for mascots Raoul certainly was on he is there with many bells and a pleasant smile scares away the jinxes with a horseshoe eee Phillies were lucky, Alexander was his fame; his its hits were regular, sure- behind; she at were needed and then and thus Philadelphia's tal- he visiting crew. altho deserves was only one was boosting O tell the truth laborious, T this game was far thought it crude! of Shore, the core to hear the battering of Gowdy’s slams, yore. and such like sounds of . HAT Boston bunch were the horsehide on the nose, k, no old-time Baker little taps, their weak and soft and feeble raps scarcely steam cnough to strain or dislocate a window ing whac Phillies’ had pane Far be it from this bard to knock such gentlemen as or speak In anger or in wrath of Pas- Bancroft or Cravath—or, side, I wouldn’t hurt their beanish pride by that I should not of Hooper, Speaker, Shore or > r, both teams woul amiss, THIS exhibition to surpass and sh I'm spoiled by former games, maybe— Burns and Stock kert, any other two or three—Bl that in a series such as this, world series class. Braley Says Phils Were Lucky, Tho Alex Was Clever and Plucky from glorious, viewed ; it had few points to fight about or cause the muse a flight about, it, wasn’t much to write about The marvelous delivery of could not make me all shivery or thrill me to The hits were light and scattering—I longed (altho the facts be rude), however it is -at least I “Alex” or ear-shattering, ee | their toes, they tapyed ff} but there was no resound crack to sort of and as the Boston [f/ ying aught t, or I must say it seems to me, ld find it not ome true crossing to | but that's the way it looks to me jverse English, and was the ball) that spelled defeat for them. He has as great fast fall. It is a | sinker.” It sinks instead of rising as !t comes to the plate, contrary to other pitchers’ fast balls. When ithe nker” is hit it is driven into the dirt, instead of into the. alr The dope was that Shore would rob \the Phillies of their advantage from short fences because they would be unch and _ Dinner 6:30 A. M. ; } CONTINUOUS SERVICE unable to drive the ball into the : to 7:30 P.M sky. The “sinker” worked as was s i expected. But when it went Into me the dirt, the heavy field played a part, and four dinky Infield ground. ers won for the Phiili Two of these were badly handled, and a chance of a double play was lost in the eighth when two runs were |acored by Scott's failure to give | Barry credit for some scintillating jflelding and to cover the bag | | Along with the “breaks,” Alex was supreme in the pinches. Nine Bos |ton runners were stranded, The| way was open for a run in every inning, but they were unable to find it. | Scott Failed | Barry's stop of Bancroft’s hit in ‘the eighth was the feature of an lotherwise colorless fielding game. He made a wonderful one-hand stab | ‘at a grasecutter and brought it) down. Scott was not at second,| | however, and a moment later an- lothe? infield knock sent Bancroft jover the plate with the run that) jclinched the game. When you eat at connec jon for your conven- fence at all hours. 1421-23 4th Ave. Adjoining Joshua Green Bidg. NEAR PIKE, ON FOURTH WE WAS. A BELL BOY |LINCOLN GOOD THINKS RIVAL “Lincoln has a mighty good team,” sald Coach Elmer Hen derson of the Broadway cham pions, after watching the North inning. Shore singled, but the side} was retired on five pitched balis, ‘AUTO MEN ORGANIZE | The Washington Motor Trades Association of Motor Car and AC ithe matinee. cessories Dealers, organized Friday| Powers, Hendrickson, Sipprell, night, will cut the city into zones Dwan, Kd and Elmer Turner and and establish a system of garage| other members of the athletic corps |rents according to the location of|of Broadway a |the garage; also fix prices for re-| tunities and conditions as any foot-| |ball man tn the Northwe entire Broadw squad at the Lin-| jooln- Ballard game. Lincoln did not any new |stsnight football, BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor but the Broadway | GET IT AT EVANS’ Ard and Columbia, 3rd and Union. ' |pairing, ete. J. H. Douglas was ha na f the o ization meet: | LY Y Lap ge oe PHILLIES ARE A | “No one ts making money,” a la speaker, “because there ts no NEW CLUB OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY Mirsing teeth are replaced by The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your ortginal standard of prices.” ‘TELLS ABOUT ALASKA One thing in which the Phil club fs odd i# that not a single player has been with the club six years. Dr. Alfred H. Brooks, government! The veteran of the lot is Fred teeth, Braminations are now being] e.diogiet, who han been. 18 yenrs|| Taderua. “He has bean a Phil mat I! making an annua mineral survey ve and a ha y peng #@ tes aro furnished in all cases, | MAKINE An in, greeted at a lunch. | cured from the Cubs. George WE BTAND BACK OF OUR WORK FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE $15 Set of Teeth, $8 MecQuillen was with the Phils in 1907 and did year eon at the Chamber of Commerce Friday He said he was not sur- prised that a lake of oll had been but went to other teams not return ufitil thi Guaranteed ..:....... discovered nea? Wainwright, in the Scan Sasieal de the geet oh $10 Set of Teeth, Arctic cisele, nd said er eran to Luderus, going te the ~ Guaranteed ......... po cheerful over the railroa |] club from Cincinnati in 1911. \TEALY STICKS WITH RED SOX Tealy Raymond | $10 Solid Gold or \h Porcelain Crown .... 4 $10 Gold or Porcelain 4) ri Bridge Work .e0.+... | Auto drivers who fail to report Solid Gold Fillings -s 1 Up | their name, address and description Other Fillings sevceeees BOG |Of car will be arrested hereafter, | Chief Lang orders TO ARREST AUTOISTS who usually hits ‘ ane } the nail on the head in baseball, 4 Office Hours, &.2 6, Sundays thinks the Red ox will make it ” WILL STUDY IN SEATTLE tougher for Alexander in Boston - than they did in Philadelphia, He Cub-RAL| < Graduates of 48 Oregon honyital| ploked Alex to win the opener, and Dentists |have asked to take « post-graduate! Boston the second game: course in the Children’s Orthopedic! “There 1# little betting on the 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. howpital here, It's being consider-| series,” Tealy says, “Boston me CORNER SECOND AVE. ed, are a little leary of Alexander.” TEAM'S COACH) | | players learned considerable during} City hotel on Long Island, | | | to From start to finish Alexander worked deliSerately and with su| "dere humble Ballard, £1 to 3, | preme confidence. He served up| #t Dugdale field Friday. “The | a total of 130 pitched balls. Thirtw | line looks strong, and the back- ye |five of these were strikes, 48 balls| field is fast and picks holes well ] BY BROWN HOLMES gat poelessgier see Coles is one of the best backs In | Some years ago Joe Launon, That Seattle has the finest] fair territory 8 were safe and 6| the city, even if he is the emai|. | hotel bellboy, hiked out to a ball billiard parlor in the world? | were outfield outs. The infield did| est.” esr ae iagen ov * “ge sep Come in and see. the rest, aside from five strikeouts, Henderson, who {s right up to! ers. The fifth was Alexander's fastest /date on modern football, and as} Today he's owner of the Boston | quick to take advantage of oppor. | Red Sox. Lannon was such @ hustler as a had his! | bellboy he was given a job as wait walter Finally er. He was such a good | they made him head clerk plays, resorting to| he built a hotel for himself, the Garden where |the lowest rate is $6 a day; the |Roston club of the American league, the Providence club of the International league and several Boston apartment houges Rallplayers who have worked for Now Lannon owns |Lannon say he ts the greatest fel: Here's one rea | low in the world son Lannon dectded last spring he| would not need Ralph Comstock, « piteher, and arranged to send him Providence. He called Com | stock to his office, told him the a} NOW)- HE OWNS A HOTEL- 2. GALL CUS, INUMERABLE APARIMENT BUILDINGS, AND WAS A PLE OF KALE —— -— apa LIKE OREGON’S DAY IN FOOTBALL j Conference football begins in the Northwest Saturday, with Ore |gon at Pullman and Whitman at Corvallis. and University of Oregon look like winne be Jarred by the state collegians and Missionaries. Incidentally, two coaches are making their debut this p. m., which makes the result more Interesting. Washington State, so Bill Dietz, who used to be Lone Star when he | |played under Glenn Warner at Carlisle, where until this assistant coach, was brought West. field was wet and heavy, and It was impossible to get a real line on the W. &. C.'s strength. RED SOX OWNER IS GENEROUS J WHITTED NEXT TO ALEX HELPS PHILLIES MOST One chap that will appear in the coming world’s series has been entirely overlooked. Pat Moran, manager of the Phillies, may be admitted to be a fair judge of the value of a ball player and Pat pays this com. pliment to one George Bostic Whitted. “Next to Alexander, Georgie Whitted deserves the most credit of any of our players for our success this year. He was the inspiration of our pep, the instigator of fighting spirit, the imbuer of confidence, and, best of all, a hard-working, re- Mable player himself. Not a sensational outfielder, by any means, but a good coverer of ground and reasonably certain in defense; not a slugger, but From a distance, the Aggies | . tho prognostications may | johnny Bender failed miserably at jeason he was n the alumni game, a week ago, the ews, and added Now, Ralph, you haven't seen | your wife sinee you started South lin the spring, so you have her join you In Providence, take her with you on the first trip around the cir cult and send the bill to me.” When Eddie Riley, secretary of the Red Sox club, was married during the summer, Lannon gave }him a suite in one of the Lannon apartments with rent free for a year. “And,” sald Lannon, “If we win the pennant this season you can have that sulte free for life.” The Sox won, Riley is happy and he, like everybody efse connected with the Red Sox club, ts telyjng what a great fellow Lannon is, The Georgetown Cubs will play the R. V. A. ©. ball club for the 1 | championship. of the city at George town, Several clubs claim the title. The game will be called at 2 o'clock, Sal) aco a leak in th’ gets quick ain’t tory! Luxe.” sults, but er satisfac- § qt? § VELVET, The Smoothest Smoking Tobacco, | is the slowly acquired result of more than 2 years’ curing of Kentucky “Burley do Lpqalt Myo Tobacce Cu ——=a>1 o—10 h’ man that starts out with acandle to find gas, re- a] GOOD CARD AT ELKS’ SMOKER Schaffil is q humbled lad today Ed Pinkman, weighing six pounds less, applied his gloved fist to the point of Schaffli’s chin with such | force that Ad was cold for ten min. | utes. Thus ended the main event/ of the best smoker the Elks’ club ever has staged. ywiinger, a colored middle. weight, showed remarkable clever. ness and flashes of ring running in his match with Ivan Miller, but slowed down in the last round Miller dropping him for the count just before the bell, The bout was fast and excited the spectators to cheers Leo Houck and Jack Carley boxed two furious rounds, Houck stopping the sailor in the last few seconds of the second, during which he flattened him twice. These were the fastest two rounds seen in Seattle in two years. Sailor Beckett quit cold in the firat round and Mamus was given the deciston Fowler, of Ballard, gained a four round decision over Hegge of Phil adelphia, Adolph Schacht refer eed all }_matohes satisfactorily, O. A. C. ELEVEN HEAVIER THAN MISSIONARIES CORVALI Ore,, Oct, 9.—Ideal weather prevailed for the football game here today between Whit man and 0, A.C. The Aggies out weigh the Missionaries seven or eight pounds to the man, but Whit man _ hope overcome this by4 speedy | USE STAR WANT ADS FOR RESULTS | tion of the history of each student, }a rigid examination of vital organs, }and careful 7 TRADED 7em a CANNON or IT. ) sie a SPORT HIT HARD BLOW AT IDAHO, MOSCOW, Idaho, Oct. 9.—That the recent football fatality will not j affect Idaho's athletic relations this | year was decided definitely by the lfaculty. The faculty athletic com mittee strongly recommended the season be continued and that no dates be canceled, and little oppo- sition to its plans was voiced President Melvin A. Bronson has | taken a firm stand on the matter. ‘Our present athletic relations will be continued,” he said. “We be lieve that, with a careful examina- rch for physical defects | training, serious acci dents will be made almost impos- sibte. We believe that we hall best the physical, moral and disciplinary development of our students by preserving our athletic a thoro se conserve activities. The course we have taken seems to me the only one which will furnish the greatest good for the greatest number. Coach Rademacher will probably lose several of his stars because of parent Martinson, & 200-por © and Morrison, a backfield bright ght, may both drop the game. Prospects of beat- ing Oregon, bright two days ago, have been materially dimmed with a timely punch in his ba has turned in many a victory for us; not a speed demon on the paths, but one of our best base runners, if not the best— that is what Whitted has been to the Phillies this season.” ALEX COST PHILS ONLY $500 Grover Alexander, world’s gredtest pitcher, who put the J) Phils in the world series, cost ]/ the Phils $500 Alex was with Syracuse in the New York State league in 1910 and big league scouts passed him up. None would recom- mend his purchase. The Phils got him by draft, the system }/ used on players arded just bare possibilities Albert EB her convicted at Merced, Cal. of kidnaping City At torney Henderson. BY BUD FISHER OREGON TEAM AVERAGES 190 PULLMAN, Oct. 9.—While the coaches are keeping the official weights to themselves, the Oregon team, which plays W. 8. C. here today, will average close up to the 190-pound average. Ensley, the big Drain tackle, is the beefiest, seal ing 225 pounds. Risley, right end, Snyder, right tackle, Mson, right guard, man, center, 185 pounds; ley, left guard, 185 pounds; Ensley, left tackle, 225 pounds; Bartlett, left end, 176 pounds; Montieth, quarter, 175 pounds; Beckett, right halfback, 195 pounds; Malarkey, left halfback, 170 pounds; Hosking, fullback, 183 pounds. 00TH Cor ALKS 705 ¢ Usien 715 First Ave. Washington locks, The Largest Dental Of- the World. fh Imitated by 7 by When the time arrives for you to artific dentures (plates or false teeth), you want a AL DEN- TIST who !s a prosthetic special! with knowledge d experience, which ; service and care you receive from my prosthetic department, which ie in charge of a specialist who has specialized on making artificial teeth. Come in and have a set guar- anteed to fit or money refunded. In my crown and bridge depart- ment I allow only Dentists who have attained the highest standing in the Dental pro’ on. This is an era of achievement, and I lay im to be- ing the ¢ Dentist in Seattle who makes san: prophylactic brid work, or bridgework that is self cleansing and that can be kept@ clean A PERFECT SET OF TEETH I can tak® a mouth with badly broken down teeth and, by remove ing those that are not worth savi I can crown, brid, a fill those a give you a perfect t th est price ever h-grade Dental work, a th modern equip. ecialists and the organs fzation to do it with. Why take chances with young chaps when you can have Dental spect Ithem ‘all ana then see me about ur Dental work EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. Ss. Seattle's Leading Dentist. Open evenings until § and Sune days until 4 for people who work, Phone Main 3640. California DIRECT ROU VIA LINE OF THE SHASTA L IMITED m OCEAN LINER OR. SHASTA ROUTE RAIL SERVIC San Francisco STEAMSHIP COAST LINE OR ANGE GR¢ IVES RAIL TRIP San Diego LIBERAL ar STOPOVER PRIVILEGES be DIVERSE ROUTES BOTH WAYS IF DESIRED $33.40 H.L.H $54.50 City, in a atte at residence if information ts desired. This Year has held ore of interest, of wonder, of beauty, of pleasure, than ~ ever before— pos- sibly ever again, — The world-famous Expositions e now at their st. The opportun- ity to visit them is nearing its end—go now. Make all arrangements with UDSON, Dist. Frt.. and Pass. Agt. Ticket Office, 716 Second Awe. Phone: Main 932. OREGON- WASHINGTON RAILROAD & NAVIGATION CO. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM passenger and ticket agent ttendance, who will give special niton to women patrons, or call i = i