Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Sept. 30, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 i v TWO i - T , ' JEFE COULD NATIONAL LEAGUE. Standing Of The Teams. NOW TTfTTHfeOW BASE I." ' -V 1. -it -s yhti&h"-Mn-- . Won. Lost. P.C. New York 97 49 " .604 Philadelphia .... 86 58 .597 Chicago ...... 86 65 .570 Pittsburgh ..... 78 69 .531 Boston 66 82 .446 Brooklyn 64 81 .441 Cincinnati 64 87 .424 St. Louis 49 100 .329 I, -- - - i . a ..-'.ivuRM'rrmt'Trw'ikif..riii -1 IT "AT to Yojr. uft H 1 n - : U 1 1 ' ii . . vv V Pi ',1 ir ? - t f ! i t i I i r x y Results Yesterday At Boston, 3; New York, 5. Second game: Boston, 8; New York, 1. At Cincinnati Pittsburgh, wet grounds. At Philadelphia, 1; Brooklyn, 4. Second game: Philadelphia, 4; Brooklyn, 4. (14 innings.) New York ... .111 110 0005 9 2 Boston 100 010 0013 11 4 Hearnc, Crandall and McLeean and Wilson; Hess, Quinn and Rariden. Second game: New York ... 010 000 01 3 3. Boston . . . . 000 215 8 8 0 Schauer and Hartley; Perdue, James and Whaling. Brooklyn .... 101 100 0003 7 1 Philadelphia . . 000 000 1001 4 1 Reulbach aand Fischer; Mayer, Mar shall and Burns and Killiner. ,finuYorkriflea. uardq MH MHMH Second game: Brklyn . . 000 000 011 020 004 16 2 Phila . . . 010 000 010 020 004 13 0 Yinghng and Fischer; Alexander and Killifer. L ANO THEN VyjHec X SU(V IT A.T TOUR UET UAfvp fND AMERICAN LEAGUE. Standing Of The Teams. Won Lost P.C. Philadelphia .... 95 53 .642 Washington .... 86 63 .577 Cleveland 83 65 .561 Boston 76 69 .524 Chicago ...... 77 72 .517 Detroit 64 85 .430 St. Louis 50 94 .373 New York 55 91 .377 VJHfeM X SHodT IT Tck tour. ATes Mon . nov. "DID X AK AVSG.U To you OH, A5OLurL0 i Results Yesterday At New York, 3; Boston, 1. Second game: New York, 5; Bos ton, 1. At Washington, 1; Philadelphia, 0. Philadelphia . . 000 000 000 0 5 5 Washington . . 000 000 10 1 3 0 Wyckoff and McAvoy; Johnson and Williams. Boston .... 000 000 0101 9 0 New afork ... 002 001 00 3 ft 9. Bedient and Cady; Keatin Sweeney. SEW EAT TUl Scientist Makes Report As to the Tastes of the Cannibals New "Schoolmaster" of the German War College Child' Born Without a Brain. American Association. At Louisville. 5: Milwaukee. Second .game: Louisville, 2; Mil- subject of tribal customs Berlin, Sept. 30. That cannibals and seldom eat white captives and then witnout particular zest is the gist of a scientific report on the subject made by Dr. Hofman, formerly a con- 2. I sui in Africa and an authority on the waukee, 9. (6 innings, darkness.l Writinc of the rpront t,,0 ' O - V-AAV A-. U1UV1 J L At Columbus, 4; Minneapolis, 9. the German-American mineralogist, Second game: Columbus, 10; Miin- John Henry Warner, by natives of neapolis, 0. New Guinea, Dr. Hofman assents that At Indianapolis, 5; St. Paul, 2. - the abstention of cannibals in Africa Second game: Indianapolis, 6; St. and of Guinea from the flesh of white Pau1' 10- men is not because thev Tear the At Toledo-Kansas City, rain. spirit of the white victim or hts now. ers of magic, as has sometimes been A New Product. assumed, but hecanse thpv oniH.. Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel. that it has an nnnlpant t Growing bamboo shoots for market the use of sharp spices and condi- may become a profitable industry in ments of salted dishes in the diet of Orange county soon, and the reason the European. why and how it came about is inter- Dr. Hofman cites an article print- esting' ed several years ago in a journal of John S. Rowland, Orlando's most Liberia, in which it was said that the original citizen and prominent grocer, cannibals in the Liberian territory was in New York recently and be- eat a white man only when he has a a pair ot friends to fallen into 'their hands alive Then Chinatown to feast on edible birds' the victim is immersed to the neck nests and shark's fins and other deli- in a running brook and held there by cacies that appeal to one when in the bonds for two or three days, on much whirl of the great city. the same principle that an oyster is Part of the menu was printed In "floated" in fresh water after being Chinese but part in plain United taken fom the beds. Dr. Hofman States, and this part Mr. Rowlandand had confirmation of this from a for- his friends had no trouble in decipher- mer cannibal ing, but they were puzzled none the The reported killing and eating of less when they saw "bamboo, shoots" Mr. Warner, in Papua, by the natives. lmf, 10 effc: . has calld attention to the fact thaf IanH ouuu "ea kow- cannibalism is by no means stamped tah Y lns- ' What out in New Guinea- Warner belieed they for- " ' ? tha tr&dium found in Papua ma"ke S 1 -io-scaped his horrible fate, th. So they oldlretand got it-bam- coTt Whicht y hrught to th l7razT7T ? t0a8t a" At ne time official belief Rowland yesterday to the Sentinel "1"?",.r,e Uumea' Dut man. "You don't know whas good f' Wde -pewtat , . wiiats gooa into the present decade has been tiro- "T...yre eate" bambo 1 'Med by unlmpaWable WtoeJS? lcxx yuu. It , , 1 7 , w vM,xvyu. Uiti alia The unshot ot tho clll0ato iZZl VLK: Zto? a'f Z rr'T- -m the pro-chie s prletor of the Chines ioinf thaf v,o I , . . ' "s . . . "UBU1" ucn to say about the practice of oridM8 ranZv TT catoIab. among the naUves : in id fht t 8aPKidly ad Gantry island. He writes .about boiling: -n V WOU d bf no trouble t0 wrings which not many years "agtf all -he wanted here and at a much were made use of for cooking aS thoTV. U imp0rt Pri8ners captured in the village war-' them from China. The proprietor is fare a wealthy person and is coming down Describing t.h '.r.o--- amL shortly to select a site and start Jinn nf iu u. , v I larm expected that tive witness, who, telling of the eatr bamboo shoots on toast -will be a much ing of .human bodies, said: . "We boll sought after dish in the local hotels thom- wQ -iu.- 1 ' "a v,ui lucm uu tutu UU11 IU1U this winter. In o u., v... x... . iisi. . ive uuuuauies, ipo; we cuw the mup like a pig. x We eat them cold; Greatest display of Fall Millinery or hot; we eat the legs .first. Weealj Goods ever Bhown in-the city can be them because-they are 1 like fish. We seen at Gaylord-Platt Co.'s opening have fish inhe reek flnd kaneftrooa tomorrow. Advertisement. in th r0aoiin . Ine oifl3 w o- vut 3 uvu ai c ' uiu ; t vw 1 n uu n uu v. fi Ull It. Puck " food." 1 1 . . Murray lens or tne remark of a Fergusson Islander to a stranger who wanted to buy betel nuts from him "Why should I sell you betel nut; I am going to eat you." Which he promptly did. He also writes of a crew of shipwrecked Chinese, who were eaten one by one, until the cap tors surfeited" with the diet, peddled those who were left around the coast selling them to the highest bidders. Wives, who ventured to look around during the funerals of their husbands were killed and eaten. One native who was concerned in the killing of a neighboring chief andh is two wives told of the subsequent eating of the victims with the utmost unconcern. He told or eating the hand of one wife, but refused to touch the other, as he had killed her, and it was not the custom of his tribe to eat one's own victim. The two women were singed first, then cut up into small pieces, mixed- with sago, cooked. wrapped up in leaves, and distributed to the victors, including their women and children Lleuenant General Rruno von Steu ben is the new "Schoolmaster of the German War College, to which the best of the young German army offi cers are.sent soon after receivinig their commission. Americans will re call with interest that other von Steu ben of the same family, he of the testy temper and indomitable perse verance, who organized and drilled George Washington's untrained re cruits into first-class fighting mate rial. The task to which Generav Ion Steuben has been assigned Was too onerous for his predecessor, General von Guendell, who retired after less than six months' service. A detail to the war academy is an Indispensible preliminary to service with the . gen eral staff, from which the officers' for 'higher Commands are selected; and - General von Steuben possibly has In "his hands the military training of a future commander of the German army in a later war. A German medical journal reports the curious casie of a child born with-but;a-brain, which in spite of this' handicap, lived to' the age of almost four years. At the autopsy ?it rwas ronndvtnat both the ceremrum berebellum, the so-called "big" atid COMRADES. We are old comrades, Poverty and I; Long years we've traveled gayly side by iUde; When first I stopped, observing he was nigh, -My heart was bursting with ambi tion, pride And oh, I feared I he would deny, de ride If The great white hope that thrilled me. But he smiled; His face was haggard, yet no little child Could giro back faith and love within a glance As did this veteran Of all miseries. "Fear not," he said, "nor look at me ..i r He Knew the Umpire. Franklin Dalat, 11 years old, son of an Igorrote head hunter of northern Luzon, in the Philippines, arrived in San Francisco yesterday on the steamer China in the care of the Rev. E. A. Sibley, an Episcopal missionary. The Filipino lad and his guardian were singled out by interviewers. "So you know about baseball?" a questioner remarked. "What do vou call the umpire?" "Tell him," Mr. Sibley prompted. "Thief sometimes, but robber most ly," the boy answered. San Francis- ' co Letter to the New York Times. t r 1 t t yw t -i t j otnuuii bilUJ'JS at Wilmington ; Shoe Co. Advert is im ut. "A man never loses anything by po liteness," said the Old Fogy. "I know a lot of men who never in-1 tend to," added the Grouch. Cincin nati Enquirer. AITLICATION roll PAKhov of KOUERT m.AC'K. ApMiicatlon wiil he made i (;..v, ni.r or .North I'iiroJiiui for nil' parn i ;.,,iri IWark. convicted at the .lulv trim .. the Sujierior Court of .New Hanover '..inn v for the crime of larceny ami seutru, , , i the stale ppultcntiary for a term el hmr years. All persons Who onoose the itiiiI in.- ,,r said pardon are invited to forward i heir protests to the Governor without del.i.v This the .'Jnd day of September, I'.ii;; ' so Jv. r-vwjr liujfc.- iintg, only the medulla oblongata be ing presem;. mis little knot bf brain tissne at the" base of the main brain : wnicn in nsnes iorm the sole Wain i was able here to control the fi,nnJ of the bddy necessary to a bare ex- rsience, out notning more. ThPhiM lay in a state 6t cotna, with contraet- ea arms ana almost motionless, dur ing,its whole existence, it was im possible to obtain, the slightest mental reaction. ' ; 'Wedon't print any such stuff as that."; said the editor loftily, as he haHded back the manuscript - ;'Well, you needn't be n wiuuwi. . ioure nnt i, . . luc umy one I am but one of life's great myster ies. Why I am here, I know not, yet 1 come At nature's call, to hound the steps of man; To hinder, hurt and baffle all I can Aye, e'ven to still the breath and soul of some Who seek as you do for the light of fame, To others I give honor, noble name; The praise of nations, yet all men de plore My hungry visage and my loyalty. None cares to see me loitering at-his door To tax the measure of his energy. I come sad-hearted, yet this much I've gained By long observing those who call me friend Succeed at last, and in the glorious end Are grateful to me that I pinched and pained." . And speaking thus, with sorrow on his face, I took his hand. No more was I afraid The ghost of horror by his voice was laid. Close, side by side, throughout life's further race We ran together. Now I thank the fate That linked me to him, knowing best my worth; Wealth would have made me less of use on earth r 'Twas Need that forced me to man's best estate. .. Lurana Sheldon, in N. Y. Times. A MILLION-DOLLAR BANK. Charlotte Observer. The "Murchison National Bank 6 Wilmington, for a long time one of tne strongest financial institutions in the South, and which recently absorb ed tne Southern National Bank, im decided to Inrrpnoo ta liono&i U,000f000. To do this the Murchison has to add orily $175,000 to its nrWn stock. Furthermore, the iMtirfhirm has under contract a new building in which to house all this monev nri take cafe of the increased business.. Charlotte extends,, congratulations to Wilmington on Its million-dollar insti tution, it is a great bank in a great LOOK FOR THE RED BELL ON THE BOX moot sho: Do you realize that on Monday, October 6th, there will be about THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED (3,500) children that will start to school for the term of 1913-'14 nu,lhat,each of the THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED children have to have a pair of shoes to wear to school. In realization of the above facs we purchased a complete line of A SCHOOL SHOES to help supply the needs of all these children. In you will Mithe Play; o 8hoe8 for doui ooys ana giMs, prices from $1.50 to $2.25, also have dress shoes in Patent Leather, Gtm Metal and Tan at aU prices. Our boy. shoe, are the long wearing kind, they are not made, clumsy but neat and dressy. Brineudren ng and we will be pleased to fit them. "":r wymtM and NETTLETON FOR.MEN. " " - .-J:: ySy .. . . '..' .r.vf -Ji."..
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Sept. 30, 1913, edition 1
2
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