Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Sept. 27, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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r 1 ? - , J ; THFTFVFNTNn DisiPATCH: SEPTBER 27 1913.T PAGE TWO BY "BUD" FISHER Wi0NPMUTX 19. ALWAYS 4'? M. Y . NO V. V. .11 1.-4 - - . : : VI HX baseball 1' .11 .Af , I" "',4 I'Vt '! - '.'.I.---. I FT -' I' i m l. r . mm. s v f '5 7'"" s 111; Mm V ,- E'. ,(f. W.' mm i V!''.T.,. mm i. ; NATIONAL LEAGUE. Standing Of The Teams. Won. Lost, Pet. New York 9? 47 .671 Philadelphia 86 56 .606 ChioiiKO 84 64 .568 Plttsl" vgh 77 69 .528 Bost'.f 64 81 .441 Bro.-i.Mi 62 81 .434 Cir. uMti 63 85 .426 St 49 . 99 .331 i Results Yesterday. l.idelphia, 6; Boston 3. .-;, :m.; IMiiladelphia 9; Boston , iit:.burRh, 6; Chicago, 1. t i'.i. ,klyn 2; New York 4. 10. St. f...!:i . . 010 001 00002 9 1 Chiciiv.H - Oil 000 00013 5 0 Lover nd Agnew; Benz and Schalk; Una- 2:10; umpires Hilde brand and Si ridan. 112 000 0004 8 2 Brooklyn. . . .002 000 0002 4 1 Tesreau and-Myers; Allen, Brown and Fischer. Time 1:52. Umpires Rieler and Byron. Twtn 000 030 000 3 6 3 uwntwii v " . - - - - iMi,i0inlii!i . -01 210 00 6 5 2 Dickson, Perdue and Rariden; Rixev and Dooin. Time 1:45. Um pires, Klein and Orth. Second game: Boston .... 000 0001 40510 12' 0 Phialdelphia. . 000 201 150 9 14 1 Tyler and Rariden, Whaling; Sea ton, Hrennan, Camnitz. Mayer and Dooin. Time 2:15. Umpires, Klem and Orth. Chicago 000 000 0101 9 2 Pittsburgh. . . 011 040 00 6 11 1 Smith, Stack and Bresnahan, Gar- grove; Adams and Simon. Time 1:40 Umpires, O'Day and Emslie. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Standing Of The Clubs. Won. Lost. Philadelphia 95 51 Cleveland 83 62 Washington.. .... 84 63 Boston 75 , 67 Chicago 75 72 Detroit 62 84 New York 53 90 St. Louis 55 93 Pet .571 .528 .510 .425 .371 .372 Results Yesterday. At Boston 10; Philadelphia 4. At New York 0; Washington 3. At Detroit-Cleveland, rain. At Chicago 3; St. Louis 2. (10 in nings.) Philadelphia . Boston . . . 000 012 001 .250 200 10- - 4 13 -10 14 0 evr - oh,uttl JtH5! f WWt TOO TO.UWftNO 3 'ft Hrr Poi t L6t OVCofcUc fN. TOO wKcf fw-v. Qtrt ro. NvC wv.ou poop. CONccrreft SHefp ; i'fv th6 bNNW LCfVAic IT TO TMG FHfcVrvJf Poo! Poo J FoR. TOO1 XOO OR. fAfe f show ou Jt vaho Do you think THe FuNNieST- N the 1 OF COWt BvT who Doyou THINK A cilotch " 1J OH, JErF, ' FOB DRY DERMRK Leader of Liberal Party Has Started Agitation for State-wide Prohibition in That Country Pretty Danish Girl to Wed Eskimo. Copenhagen, Sept. 26. I. C. Christen sen, leader of the Liberal party, has started an agitation for statewide pro- Boaiulman, Houck, Peunock, Busch hibition in Denmark. Not long ago and Schang; Leonard and Cady; time the Liberal party successfully father- 2:00; umpires Evans and Egan. ed a. bill which enforces important Washington . . .002 001 0003 8 0 restrictions on the sale of liquor in New York. . . .000 000 0000 6 1 bars, restaurants and similar places, Boehling and Ainsmith; McHale. and the Liberal leader evidently in- Keating and Sweeney; time 1:58; um- tends to follow this up with a law en- pires Dineen and Connelly. FOOTBALL NOTES. Harvard, as usual has no mid-week game scheduled this year, and Yale only one, the game with Wesleyan. ( The greatest "prep" school game in the East is scheduled for Nov. 8th, when TJxeter and Andover will clash at Exi rer. forcing total prohibition of the sale of intoxicants in Denmark. During the past few years the Dan ish" people have become more and more absteminous in their habits, and as the younger generation is especial ly temperate, the agitation for prohi bition is not based on any growing !u sobriety on the part of the people of the country. In explaining wny the Liberal party, gen for hotel accommodations, the city became Carnegie mad, and when his nephew, George Lauder Carnegie, turned up instead of the steel king, he received a reception at the railway station which caused him to flee in dismay. From the day that the Copenhagen papers announced that the philanthro pist was coming to Copenhagen the American legation was overcrowded with people seeking introduction to the Laird of Skibo. Many of them were possessed with a sincere desire to make the acquaintance of the libra ry donor, but most of them had schemes for aiding him on his philan thropic plans. Many women came to the American minister with' most ex traordinary devices which they want ed him to assist them In selling to Carnegie. One wanted him to buy what Bhe said was a lock of Abra ham Lincoln's hair, and another want ed to sell the ironmaster a portrait of John Kelly at Saratoga. People came from as far as Norway and Swe den to interest Carnegie in charitable institutions in their countries. When the train arrived the station was 'crowded with newspaper men and townspeople out to greet the Napoleon CAUSED II II Thi two Bakers in line with Trenk mam- :,nd Dewitt should give the whicn stands for a large measure of Prii i . i on Tigers a strong backfield Personal liberty, should be backing j of charity, but no one appeared. Some thi.-; ; s"cn a bill, Mr. Christensen says alco- one in the crowd heard a quiet young in'm i orbett, the former Harvard1 10 " owlc uri.lin.n star, has been1 secured to bould forbid and regulate its use Just tn i.ii ;i, foot ball sauari of the A. as lt does in the case of other recog and . College at Stillwater, Okla. nized poisons Vine Ml the roo-nlnr Maim atavan Until the late temperance leeisla- tli.it i .s.t West Point 6 to 0 last vear llon weni ini ettect, DenmarK naa at Philadelphia, are members of the depended upon education to fight the Annaijuli.-; team again this year. evils of intemperance, and hi sis the University 0f Texas has a player first time tne advocates of the pro- named Eddie Slaughter. If he lives hibition movement have sought gov up to his name his opponents on the eminent regulation of the liquor traf gridiron will retire from the game in fic quick order. It is believed that the people will Eddie Mahan, captain of the crack acquiesce in the proposed legislation Harvard freshmen eleven of last year, in spite of the alleged attack on per looks to be the most likely candidate sonal liberty, which they feel must be among the punters of the Crim- limited for the benefit of the commtin- Bon varsity squad. ity. Some of the leading Liberal pa i Yale's football coliseum, to be com- pers have protested strongly against pleted in 1914, will seat approximately the bill, one-pointing out that a person 61,000 persons and will have standing is not educated by making him inca 4 rom for at least 6,000 or 7,000 more, pable of managing his own -affairs, but George Brooke, who not only was by letting him live his life In the Pennsy's greatest punter, but the best largest possible liberty under the re the game ever has produced, expects sponsibility of ,. himself and the com to have 150 men in his varsity squad munity t at the University of Pennsylvania. The opposition papers attack the minister's new policy, and insinuate Tourist How do I go from here to that it is for the purpose of catching Blindalm? votes Innkeeper You aren't going all that By departing for sUpervik, Green- way up surely? Have a glass of beer, land, to wed an Eskimo named Cem- then, and then, perhaps, I'll tell you nity, Miss Ellen Grdth, "a pretty tan- something about it. Fliegende Blaet- ish girl, will set a precedence Iy be- - ter. - ing the first known white iwoman to wed an Eskimo. On the other hand "My son, be polite until you have several white nieii aaVe '"married ,Es accumulated your first hundred thou- kimo women, and just recently the sand." Arctic explorer. Dr. Freuchen, took an 'Yes, dad." Eskimo woman as a wife. The. Eskimo "After that, the regulation thing is women areBaid to beTery; pretty to be crisp and terse." Louisville On leaving for Greenland Miss Did the Immensely Wealthy Prince of India by High Play at Baccarat Americans on Vacation in France Amazed at Exorbitant Prices. man tell a hotel porter that he had engaged rooms at the hotel in the name of Carnegie. The shout went up, "HQre he is," and before George Lauder Carnegie could gain the shel ter of the hotel omnibus he was al most mobbed. Disappointed of the greater celebrity the people had to content themselves with the. lesser, and, during his stay in Copenhagen, young Carnegie learned that being the nephew of a famous uncle entails some disadvantages. Denmark used to be famous for its lobster fisheries, but lately the tasty Paris, Sept. 26. The Aga Khan, the immensely wealthy Prince of India, who among other things is head of the Mohammedan religion in his coun try, caused a sensation at Deauville Casino recently by his high play at baccaret. He seemed to be quite in different whether he won or lost and many people who observed him ex pressed their conviction that he had no actual knowledge at any time on this point. It was the custom of the Prince to go to the gambling rooms accompani ed by a servant carrying a valise full of bank notes. The Prince, from time to time during the play would either request his servant, who stood behind his chair, to remove the piles of win nings and stuff them in the valise, or else to supply him with fresh bundles of 1000-franc notes . to hazard. Per haps the servant was more observing than his master and knew whether fortune smiled or not, but to observe he was as inscrutable as the Prince, and gave no sign. The Grand Duke Boris of Russia di vided the attention of onlookers with the Aga, frequently winning or losing 50,000 ($10,000) francs at a sitting. Americans taking their vacations at French resorts this season have been amazed at charges which appear to be higher than anywhere else in the world. A room with a bath for 37 francs ($7) a day during July at one of the frequented hotels in Deauville, rose to 200 francs ($40) a day through- shell fish has grown so scarce that it out August. The ordinary charge for has become very costly, so much so ' a single room at the resort is 100 Courier-Journal. that the market here has been suc cessfully invaded by American canned lobster. After a long conference of scientific experts and practical fishermen it has been decided to adopt the American methods of hatching lobsters, and the work will be taken up all over Den mark under government auspices. The state will make a large contribution to the project. The Danish papers are issuing warn- !ing to bridegrooms under forty years of age not to get married this month. If they persist in planning weddings they may be missing when the hour arrives, for this is the month when the war department is expected to give twelve hours' notice ofymobiliza tion for maneuvers. All men under forty years who are liable to bear arms will be compelled to obey the summons, and not even, a wedding will serve as an excuse. One of the results of the activity In moving picture circles has. been a dispute between managers and actors. In the future the managers . declare Groth was given an j enthusiastic fare well by her friends' and on board ship "Karl, let's play papal and mamma, her arm re-;flUe.di:,1!ritli-. turnery I'll be mamma." The "Eskimo bridegroom Is a locat mis-jiney win give permission for their act- "Oh, no; you're much too stupid for I sionary. ; " Jtors to ayyear in moving jjlcture that. You. be-rrapX'V-Fliegende Blaet- Hearing that , Andrew Carnegie naa dramas only on condition that they be ter. ' , I telegraphed to Copenhagen, from- Ber-JgiveA ten per cent of the earnings of francs ($20) a day. These are prices asked of all comers, whether Ameri cans, Russian Grand Dukes or French men. A .Parisian journalist made note of his experiences at Deauville. The clerk at the first hotel he entered re plied to his inquiry for a room that one remained at 80 francs ($16) a day, just a room for one person, with, of Course, no bath. The clerk seemed to apologize for the low price, and to room so trival a rate could not be of much account. "We abandon it to you at 80 francs," said he, "because it is not large, but it is a really good room". The enquirer hesitated at that and crossed the street to another establishment. The best that could be done there was a room for 120 francs ($24) a day; he returned and took the 80 franc room. A simple lunch at 31.50 (6.30), d cab to the ra ces after considerable 'bargaining, 40, francs ($8), and dinner at 43 francs ($8.60) completed an expensive day. The refusal of several areoplane manufacturers to, nter their machines their employers. The actors are not inclined to accede to this demand. for the International Cup competition, at Rheims, indicates thai aerial ra cing is going the way automobile ra cing. Designers aver that the over-engi-ned and lightly constructed air ma chines built for speed do not actually advance aviation more than machines built for automobile racing alone are fit for every-day practical use. Avia tion appears today to be entering upon a period in which study and experi ment will be carried out in the di rection of heavier, slower and safe machines.. The effort will be to drive a heavier apparatus at a speed less dangerous than a mile-a-minute or more, the velocity attained by most lightweight aeroplanes of this season. President Poincare received four centenarians during his recent visit to the Limousin country. The eldest was 106. The youngest, 100 years old, had been the postmaster of the village of Vaulry for sixty-seven years. The President was told, as arc all visitors to the Limousin, that health and long life are the finest products of the region. Besides the four cen tenarians, the President was told of ten other persons who were 99 years old, and of twenty near the village of Vaulry who are in sound halth, al though! well along in the tenth decade. M. Schomel-Roy, a resident of Ver sailles, has attracted attention to him self on account of his age. He re cently started civil proceedings in an infringement case, and it came out during the hearing that he was born August 25, 1807, at Versailles,, and that he saw Napoleon I, frequently. Owing to the fact that his father had an ap pointment at Napoleon's court, M. Schomel-Roy frequently played with the little King of Rome. Count Stenboch Former, of the Is land of Great Lyakersky, New Siberia, has presented to the natural history museum in Paris what is considered to be the finest specimen of a mam moth yet found. The gift is especially interesting be cause the animal had not finished di gesting his last meal at the moment of his death, countless centuries ago. Thus the savants are, for the first time, able to study accurately the na ture of the flora of the far distant epoch; they have simply to- examine the contents of the mammoth's stom ach. He was found in an absolutely complete condition in a strata of ice. The skin, which is without a scratch, fs covered with reddish hair, thick and soft to the Couch 'as that of a lap dog. The work of digging out the monster from his primeval cold storage and bringing him to Paris was one of ex treme difficulty The body was cut carefully into pieces, each one lab elled, and then carried 1,800 miles to a railway line on dog sledges. The musumhas- come into posses sion of the skeleton of an enormous dinosaurus found near Majunga, on the west coast of Madagascar, by the explorer Perrier de la Batfe. Some idea of the dimensions of this monster may be gained from the fact that a strong man can barely life one section of the vertebrae. Although only par tially disinterred, the natural history .... I experts oi me museum estimate trom measurements of the parts they al ready -have that this dinosaurian con siderably exceeds in size the diplod ocis, a plaster cast of, which Mr. Car negie gave the museum. Another ac quisition is the skeleton of one of the fabulous birds known to palaeontolo gists as apiornis, which stood eighteen feet toll. Senor Maura, the Spanish Conserva tive leader, who has twice resigned the Premiership of Spain, has a way of speaking frankly to his royal mas ter, King Alfonso. Just now Paris is amused at two remarks made by Maura to the King in public. When he resigned the first time the statesman said "Kings who amuse ' themselves at playing with crowns frequently lose them." On the second occasion he said: "The Premier in most constitutional countries must have two things in order to govern, first the confidence of Parliament, and second the confidence of the Crown. In Spain, however, three things are necessary, the confi dence of Parliament, the confidence of the Crown, and confidence in the con fidence of the Crown." IF ITS QUA TY SHE likes, get OFFICIM SIGN , Chocolates Saccie Why in the name of good ness do you keep taking out your watch? Have you a rtain to catch? Tom Eh? Oh, no. The fact is I haven't seen it for a long time. Illus trated Bits. Muggins What's the matter with Brokeby? He looks worried. Guggins He can't meet his bills. Muggins That's nothing. I can't dodge mine Springfield Union. and appreciative THE m EOPLE'S Popular I LACE Li, AGENCY c0 500,000 BRICKS FOR SALE Roger Moore's Sons 6 Co Brick Manufacturers and Deal ers in Building Material. PHONE 154 KORRECT SHAPE SHOES FOR MEN $4, $4.50 $5, $6 A. Vi SHAPE' All Guaranteed Patent Leathers Included. Carl F. Strunck & Co. 128 South Front Street. Phone 800-J. ' WILMINGTON. N. C. 7- "1 X
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1913, edition 1
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