Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ite WoRLD, THUNSDAY, AUGUST 11, Ten0 ferented in them and knew moat of department of tie other etore the MASS MEETING FOR __ {th Southern Pacitte ‘Mattway ‘yen | “OUNT” HELD ON SUSPICION them personally, | 1010 season got fat under way, ba pany, and the Btate took over part * —— cause it Just isn't time for a pitcier BUNGALOW COLONY] *,i: " | it It 800. The remainder of the land was! yw. 1 | MKINGBY LOYAL TO ANSON. |'0,win ball games and bit 800. a rentod to the Rockaway Point Com | ae UAE Pel nent anes T#hlob | guocrantl rom a batting viewpoint Rockaway ‘Point Folk Plan Fight] pany, @ land {mprayement concern in| wage Claimed by Btw. ENT FANS show that you never can teil who lthat T have aver played 1) the bit Against’ Increased which Willam M, Greve, an associate | on presenting checks for two bagw nt . U Proaident Me- league. At pitching, however, | man of former Sonator Reynolds, wae the j the Ponneytvania. Station wday 4 te CPMINAE August q r |, welts i to pull through with a good Re | moving spirit gontained, seerm!ngly at mi nt |showlog: is Altogether, sthere were ee ae Man Who sald he wae Count Louls de hot have been suspected of being aj thirty-slxtstaris and twent f The three organizations of thé} PLAN PATRIOTIC SPECTACLE. | Henri, forty-two, ite of Parts and now baseball fan. When he was t|them were entered in the “won cc Rockaway Point bungalow colony to- entthainreneneentl of No. 457 West 234 Street, was arrent- nominated for the Presldenoy | was/umn, Thirtesn gumos—unlucky nUM- gay announced plana for a mass . oft az Nation's od end taken to the West Side Court, | y « ordered to leave the old Waite A. ¢k- | ber—1 lost, Somehow my b: meeting to-morro: f ‘oin,| Conatitution te Be Obaerved, | where he Wan held in $1,000 ball on a ng ni, ad con Fran |p To he, write COAL Yeas, ean gti pater need ae | amation we [hates ok eesti st Gnd ibe urniture.Sale with ith antl after wldctton, One }becaiee I. got only three hdémers to take action against Incréased rent-| ‘The one hundred and thirty-third The Polen bay, Wee. “ana: Gontarced lival Ca didates for! Prasj.| 2¥8a!a# @ crowd vf 3a correspondents |througbout the season, so I'm not als. There are 2200 or more bungu-| niversary of the elgning of the Conati Sees, snd GAN. Svenebe “Ween $ aandidates for Presi-| were, cluttering WP lite front porch |braxgine about my bat E low owners, many policemen and| tion of ihe United Btatox will Peet 7 | £8.000, belonging to Mrs. Marle Mala- 219 500 s F J ency Like Baseball and Wiking, and @omy vine mentirnod ahing average Gnas inate firemen, Mayor Hylan has taken a} unde: auspices of th Conatitutional | ea p of Tre mn N. J. She sald sho b } pa ; bukeball and the fact that I hud been se hat fall, band by asking the Attorney Gen- | L« pee tiled “We, the People,’ | left the bags at a bench In the wait- . Saseball Players. one of the men, pied, |beating Brooklyn for the champion- erat if the title to the lands stands | wih Yo Gromehted I Gam acie Tint bcd. | ine room Tuosday night whe she went Furniture@ Rugs ‘ig you root for whea you are|ship. People were saying at the time in the name of the State. Ing actors playing the roles of the orig-| to a newsstand and they disappeared By Hugh 8, Fultert {that the Dodgers were not really u he title to the bungalow lands does! ial Maners., Thia acane will be put In) during her absence. She purchased $ { y gn so, Fullerton. “I must always reserve thy nt | champion club and did not bh hot rest-in the & The facts are Constitution i Independence Fall, Phil: | some of the articles in Paris, wheneo { AB RH PO A E/to root for Cup Anson,’ said McKin-|serve to represc me a Nations that the jand Inally belonged to ndelphta, i 1787 sho recently returtied 9 ferding, 1b, 6 3 2 12 © -@{ley “lie has been one, of my, idols | League against us {dn’t think #0 fe years, T think |though, and every ball [ pitched in r — —= = = Our Prices Will Surprise You. Come in— P f ti for man’ . mn t 7 i ever re c 4 Warren G. Harding, the Republic | [Ph tna de rood, a in epoteand |that series was gent over with all tho inspect the pieces—look at the prices—and Porceloid San nominte tor President, reat | Mavens for good, oth in wpae nid that series was sent over with all the realise the many dollars you will tave. Take Refrigerator Pete have become tamnons, alracmt| ington 1 Wil Deew coeleP tee THE heng|nant and a Reiter’ for the hgnost advantage of this AUGUST SALE, «neverto- Soma Iene #4 fomous ax Babe Ruth, if he had| team until Chicago comesythen {must honor in baseball. Tverything in my be-forgotten chance, Apartment atyle Ny ne nd ari on © ball to IN PLAIN FIGURES i sick to nis ball playing, He was| he for Anson PM head and arm 1 put on the bal ALL GOODS MARKED Porceloid first baseman of the. Marlon. Clip.| “ABd He seldom mineod a gare: win. At that time T was too young Our Dignified Credit revi $97 Cine would imagine thata strong, yinile,|and I am just that young to-day ‘The other surprise wus iu Roseeveit.|to take chanoes in a World's Series, é Bors Wher ne was a kid, and be could i : 4 sport loving out-of-doors man would | Any man who becomes so cock-sure “NewYork Spies America Invites Your Account! Was $37.50 have been a basebball fam. One day 1|Of himself as to let himself grow ; happened to be in a conipany in which |carelese any moment in a World's Ree er er) rformance as a first 4 Be F he in he was the honor guest and the inevi- ries, Or in any other game, oman, and it ls clipped from the} tabje baseball topic was broadhed.|elther too big or too small for his rion paper he now owns ‘The} Roosevelt turned to me rather brusque-|Chosen profession. And I'll say right e Was played in 1882 and three}ly and said: joes vied ae bee one he big. , » retire ct Fullerton, 1 tnow nothing about) In the Worid’s Series uguinat Aaa BS cetited: from aBtitSl t clauile aha hove no love for it.| Brooklyn in 1916 the old soup bone : I do not understand it. My boys aro| Was Workitig like a piece of steel ma- Behe circumstances of his reurement| constantly tadking it ut table and ev.|chinery. 1 had everything on the bail < Damful, and he not only retired] erywhere until I have had te tell them| {hat any pitcher could want—and first baseman bur gave up his am-| to cease it as a topic of conversation.” | {Pat any hitter didn’t want. The re- ion, which was be as great a] The reason perhaps, wag that in| Sut of it was that I pitched thirteen Player as was Capt. Anson boyhood, poor health and weak eye-|Scoreless innings in the series, They sight prevented him from participating | 0d bit me once or twice, but it did volit of the Jonns-|1n the sport, and he never learned the|th€M "%o good, because not a man- ufferers aud Harding | game or understood it well enough to| Jk Bo< around. to cover first base. A] care for It, ‘ated And that wus the beginning of a| ae consisting of Buffet, China Closet, ¢ 50 un corm e ‘ul Oe record in scoreless innings that stands; be “ ig * Mivien Was paiss Societe iS 19M, the Ball Gradionie, mA) “1 15 my credit in the annais of baseball, | { i je, Dining Table, 48 inches, 6 foot ex: i (All Rights Reverved by United Feature Syndicate.) nee . pes Seed eee SSAC 4 wi team, and, following the style llustrated, was $532. If his idol, Anson, Harding essayed to Ce eee (lay with bare hands. The other out- Se fielders had strong arms, and at the $2,000 RINGS LOST , close of the contest it was proposed ’ } that the food sufferers play a game AT ELKS’ RECEPTION } fg the benefit of Harding, whose —_— hands were swelled to the size of a 7 , = | pair of hams. ‘The fact that the of- Miss Kneip of Maspeth Reports { Gcial soorer did not credit bi ito 7 s Wi ii | AD error stands in his favor. IN FIRST YEAR That Gems W - Missed on | | August 1. sana (|= MI i mi Nel el ae! = (8 ae i t | j eins BOTH CANDID, win, } FANer | eee | It became known yesterday that de- : / Pe | "No matter who ts elected. the F ) _ | teetives of the Hunter's Point Station | i 4 rc i if ' United States is certain to have an-| (Continued from Page Three. are investigating the theft of two dia- | : . i f py Oras es | other President who is a baseball fan. Saas: |mond rings, valued at more than $2,000, ‘ f > } ‘Nimmy” Cox has been one of ute] any time she failed to show up I was! from the women's wash room of poareg dani Frames, upholstered in ' arent Red footers es i sinoe 1891, ) useless, She was attending a girls’) Queensboro Lodge ot Bis, ER eral Ls yo hen’ makes a full 2 Apa perhaps before that remeniber | college in Boston and taking a special| jand City, The rings belonged to Mias| - size when open; j When he used to con ping wround course in baseball at the open air| Catherine Kneip of No. 122 Maspeth Greenpoint Decorated Bed his does not include $ 50 Sportng department to see | school in Fenway Park. She evidently| avenue, Maspeth, Queene, whose In antique ivory, two-inch 3, Mattress; was 69: ! wether any of the passes were not fell for Prof. Ruth of the baseball! prother-inlaw and nephew are mem- a ‘ . ‘ . i heavy Tillers, panels with fased BOBO on crcoece a f Working on his day off, when he was/ faculty, because one day In October,| bere of the lodae. . ee ; ie predaliions, ta-4 f >t b 1914, when Prof. Ruth had a class in| Miss Kneilp says she accompanied yea 4 since. Baltimore, he up and married ber. 8 But as a fan ar ctive baseball as these men on Aug. 1 to an enter 2 4 . o fs ; f Was $30.25... ' fod Nam i eae And he has been happy ever since.| iainment given by Quensboro Lodge F ¢ ie . ‘ Gaperte oe, ae as 7 oakbolten age ae this story is supposed to be) #47 members of the Staten Island a : 7 myself, I wouldn't be fair to) P % ‘en | = } one of the offlcars of the Marion basc- myself if I didn't present my better ee Ltn ry ee tak c 4 "yf Vey 2 ro * TH Ws , b pat team when the club was fighting 90 per cent. She knows baseball and| ume Miss Knelp saya, hendanse bas a j A é : ‘Toy pennants in the old Ohlo § ean ha a 3 er| » Mi . : j f ‘ Bs 3 ~ Eeague, and he knows the «ame aiid | as patty. ramgntal patter) Came soiled and sie drove back to. : j a ; a. 23 : a a To fusconile they task $24: CLOSED SATURDAY AT 1 P.M. Bul MOTOR TRUCK DELIVERIES the players as well as any fan. Ih| Whenever am playing at home she| the lodge to wash them. {Marion he never missed a ball xame,| is at the ball park, and she has|,,82e removed the rings, one of two My . stones and the other of three, and placed them on a table in the wash he is neutral spend most of our winters in Boston room. “DANDERINE” hip. because I have « cigar factory up | there which takes some management. i ing Out GOT DAUBERT His CHANCE OM the field we drop baseball. We Stops Hair Coming ' Sod ~ motor together in the evenings or go zs H X ‘ but when the weather la bad I somes 11°, i eae Rae times sit at home arid play the organ. Nene oN ap sed i do. And, believe me, | hehe, beat nite " Pu wicked tremolo. She } ° e Babe; she calla me day he showed up at Marion, and h®| Hon. And what 1 call her le-be. looked as if he nd since he has been in thé Senate | learned zo much about the flne points }|_ has been one of the regular attend-|of the game that she can anticipate (jagts at the Washington xrounds, al-| manager's instructions, and fre ways rooting for the Senators until| quently calls a play before de, [[Slaveland arrives. Boing a” loval | Duritar the stan one oe he ae. Ohioan, he is a rooter for Cleveland a New York apartment, but we have Wlito win the American Leagu another piace with trees and grass | the around it up in Sudbury, Mass. We jthe world’s champto: On Steamers Operated by the Commissioners of the PALISADES INTERSTATE PARK Gonarai Ofticns, 90 Wall Bt Phone Jone 4328, DAILY, INCLUDING SUNDAY ie: = oa Daylight Savving Time, ‘Hudson River cc h ee | City, 8.30 A. M. &% 4. Battery Park, the day Hive, NY, . tween ts. ir Returning, leaves Best Mountain, 4.30 P. M, then. Possibly But my story is beck In the base- y Hoe nee Re eee We 18 Bio il Cl Rg ae ; (i ball senad n SS) 1944 and I must return | y a leaves Rear Mountain 5.90 P.M, {eta at Marion to it When arrived in Boston it} es : ; Baseball club in seemed to me that there was nothing | F R Trip Tarton great men, date continu really} more for me to win in the way of ands honors, and because I felt that way Daubert the biow was all the harder when e DAILY, INCLUDING SUM Y. o ‘Bat, Sun. and Hotidays, 85e, woul ateg Mei en Children Under 12 Half Fare, Cafeteria Lunch Monvoe Clothes—Forward Styles at Backward Prices . Jake service 921. ‘rail thekets made his start there, and 1 am glad|the Red Sox refused to take fire In these days of fluctuating costs and unstabilized values, it will bountifully repay every fh) neigitet Be! Gonnections. All throuah sail tenses Priews to way that I helped in his case. 1 from my spirit and casually farmed man in nee clothes to take rant ‘ha hine / emember going to Bill Armour and|me out to the Providence Club of nat eed of = DAYLIGHT, BAY! orm a jersey] urging him to give Daubert a chance. old the International : N pounn [Through y een eo eire Dale Ae about Ae toth ies ee A Short Flight to Economy comrm wouno Rare | Toate UL speci | Ctra through shyness, and we a8 pretty disappointing to a young and visit the nearest Upstairs Monroe Clothes Shop. sive, but he showed signs of coming) fellow who thought he coming \igreatness. 1 urgued with Armour| along fine, but I remembered the| A few cents buys “Dan After (ithat If Jake had a real chance and| advice of Brother Matthias to “play jan application. of “Danderine’ you cane jreal encouragement he would make) the game,” so I said nothing much| not find « fallen hair or any dandrutt: |] LAKE HOPATCONG, $1.62 v A Tp Ee Monroe Clothes are so far superior in actual basic value to other clothes priced at any- thing near ours that you'll need no urging to buy—you'll be delighted at the opportunity to save. ‘SaTURDaTs Onur. The sensible “tical, ec ie: sce 5 “Yr Ww. e road St, Ni , od Ai, the’ big icasue, bat ooaid| ead went tovwork tne Providence | uesides avery hate, cower nour lite: The most sensible, practical, economical Way to piece out your summer wardrobe is to get jot convince him. , Naturally I al-| | On Sept. 2 1 was back in Boston |¥igor, brightness, more color and thick: Hf a Monroe Palm Beach or Monroe Mohair Suit. “We have a splendid variety for your selec- MAUCH CHUNK, $2.16 Ways have been interested In Dau-/and they gave mea chance to work. tion at prices that you couldn't duplicate to-day at wholesale. | BYPRY SUNDA | Altogether I broke. into the box score = — ——J re) et it. rat Upstairs M 2 Sk ic tgs " 1, M = Clothe = just ve W. 25d Bt. 8.20; iberty pinyar: [tour mes before the esnuce enien ome up, visit any of our Upstairs Monroe Shops; you'll find Monroe Clothes are just as H Fe pone A Secs Bay ’ if, A Ms "Broad st, ; Mey chose me as first basemen be-| Pitching for Harry Frazee's team, |) muse I was tall, but no streteh of TWO games I won, one I lost and one | WHERE T0 60— ~imagination could make a George |I did not finish Sleler out of me. After that Johna-| Boston did not have occasion to HOW T0 GET THERE: town flood benefit game I retired per- | farm me out after that: It is true that — Wanently to permit my hands to get I pitched only twenty-two innings fgemno and got -no homers that year, but T({] QVER THE BEST ROADS advanced in quality as they are reduced in price. ° They provide the utmost Service, Style and Come up and learn what over 200,000 Monroe Clothes Regulars already know—that {Return mine “*Bxcepe Hunday. "This only if capacity permits, Are adriaeg ty return, Bares fuel. tax, Above is Daylight Time. % DEAL ONE-DA ‘Telephon jan sUkoAy Trips Up the Hudson to bur ay" Lie REAR sa wre nw vn | AD MOUNTAIN Rerrerae re ahape tm T have ad taken part in only four’ games $ 50 you always act more and pay less when you buy known a great many of the players, and had dony " one i erie ec Monroe Clothes- Mike them, and like to watch their rece Ae the big ee we The 1929 LW Lida 3 Seabee eo) d h hes ork id their records. a eo XO’ COM: a dy . “FO. —di men onicy tartare Tike io see them hit | when f wan ure I'd get my chane eee ai and frect from the maker, Dron Steamboat Go | sv. crano nepuauic ywyyeearuenrs ft out, and fre! that I am missing Oy sian © twenty-five tim ‘s SSocl (i ours Outing Trousers $4.75 up —via our lower rent Upstairs Shops, and something thin season by being too ed in sever Thie gave . busy to see as much baseball as usual ' ‘ G : nt one ihome fina did mace. ul e eb Ss oul It makes a fellow feel good to hit one | Meo Pichinie aver ght ' Whi'e Flannels $8.50 CONEY ISLAND (Round Trip,.Fare Sos, ss 40 ANCII —from America’s Largest Clothiers, music—nebneen ‘Telephows ’ . Bowling Green 1615, {bet right, alther in baseball or golf. | jotinet tho export pitching of the okt ED | # Come up—see the Men’s and Young Men’s Suits we are selling at “HUDSON RIVER NIGHT When Babe broke his home run rec- | BENUS N1° catning” armacot. the oe PUBLISHED BY P nUDSON RIVER 2 Rague moundsmen as ‘a the me The Bureau of Tours of the four nomors |4| Automobile Club of America et much atten. appointed because I wasn't there eee him smash it.” at the kids on the OTHER PRESIDENT FANS. $19 —*23—827 |e OS There have been « numbor « on, for a record of tour hgme clouta f Steamship Lines, In Metin Week Heel Teves ok ne eee ee eae However 2 Fee Pags Rend as, | Wholesale Values \Vholesale Values Wholesale Values rey BUST IN r game, and while he was President my batting average for the year put |]| 29 Pages of Running Directions, $27.50 and $30 $32.50 and $35 $37.50 and $40 ° oO Giron torcwnlly calea on Hieeuae tel aay tee ip on || 45 Smaller Maps showing how to METROPOLITAN LINE y to tnlk bageoall always was re They are the last word in VALUE. and ask them about thelr teams. Mr enter and leave principal cities. . Vis CAPe COR Cru, Taft was a jolly fan, enjoying the a in 1918, — SS ----vOlWVTY—-—— fame an much ts any, Oiher woolen en ‘i Coa ne ase aon Ut Extra Pants that are Double Extra Values -- $4.75 & $6.75 ea er tt warmest, enthusiasts, and after his ares tes! Hikeee la'es and Souliern Canada— Lists ee Prone Barciay brother purehae d'un. interest. In the They | sTaowton clus] finest hotels for temeheon and overngit MANHATTAN BRONX Pal. Oks plow up in one Tl s'ops-—Any rou'e can be loca‘ed in OMG one minute, while car is running, Bergen Ave..at 14)th 52. BROOKLYN 42nd Street cor. B'way. 50 E. 42nd“ “ Madison ROMAN hORMRC TTA II TI OTIII } Electric Fans ta) i Nassau“ “ Frankfort Court and Montague St. Three Trips Daily W,aiiannie 3 On account of moving Wid) Price 59¢ Postpaid 5 Cortlandt“ “ — Biway $87. Fulton at Hathush [f Uvy. Pater Plerea.toaMe eo all Electric Fans Reduced. CAN BE OBTAINED FROM 14th St. opp. Acad, Music NEWARK—151 Market st FARE | ginch D.C. Fans .NOW $9.00 Res. 815.00 BUREAU OF TOURS, 34th Street cor. B’way JERSEY C1TY-*mer ay, fl Ghitutiita, FARE B00 12 ., Non-Oscillating Fans “90.50 “30.00 ath Aver'@ E4th Street ash “ & Broadway PATERSON— 220 Main 3, ERS— 12... Oscillating Fans “26.50 34.00 SH RRer Tein 59th “ at Col. Circle DAYLIGHT TRIP ON Tre SOUND o ter. urea seu me kee ee PHILADELPHIA~\j"", rt your vacation with this dolignttut 116. " Fans » 30.00 42.00 |= — = 125th “ cor. 7th Ave ALBANY, N. Y,~¢; Bound to New Londen, Bleumer Unewtat i 16 .. Non-Oscillating Fans “6 24.50 “ 32.00 Chapin loaves Fier 40, N. KR, Mondays | |fOaahler, New York SPECIAL only, 10 A, M.j foot Bast 924 st, 10-86 A, Mui due New London, 8.18 P. Rectiona there for ail polnts in Sow i Information at Conasctid Tioket The Now Fngland Steamant NSBURG, Md, BOMTS. Poe vera pea ee yr tad ‘Skin Troubles —— Socthed- — With Cuticura 6inchPolarCub .. , ‘ Large stock on hand, Immediate deliveri: complete with cord and plug ready to attach, METROPOLITAN ELECTRICAL SUPPLY CO. '. 6th St. le seer 3451 aA alceinahmment eseomter ines See esa enorme , epnethds ects