The Capitol Hill News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 21, 1914 Page: 5 of 8
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‘N.ture'i Pleasant Way to Hialth”—No
Drugs, No Knife. If you »re sick,
send for my booklet, “Nature’s
Way.” Sent free.
DR. A. J. SUPLER
lie Wnt Sru< Ax.
COACHING RULE TOO DRASTIC
Manager* Birmingham and Callahan
Oppose Order Restricting Coach-
ers at Third Base.
GE0R5E A. MATLACK
LAWYER
practice! In All Courts. Special
Attention to Estates, Guardian-
ihips, Land Titles, Contracts,
Leases, Mortgage Foreclosures,
Drains and Ditches.
Collections Made Everywhere.
Offices: 415-16-1/ Majestic Bldg.,
Phone Walnut 5153.
Oklahoma City Oklahoma
I The now rule prohibiting coachere
from touching a runner rounding third
will be repealed before another sea-
son, if the rules committee will listen
to Manager Birmingham.
The Nap nabob is opposed to the
new rule as it now stands. He has
the support of Manager Jimmy Calla-
han of the White Sox. Both declare
the rule is too drastic, and predict it
will reduce the art of coaching to a
mere formality.
“There is sound excuse for a rule
which bars tackling runners and the
L Y R 1C
TH £ A TR E
The Beit in Vaudeville
AND
FIRST RUN OF
Motion Pictures
Any Seat Ten Cents, Anytime
Continous Preformance.
WFmv
*#■
TEETH
.W'TMOUT PLATES
me*
SAVE YOUR TEETH
AND
SAVE MONEY
AMERICAN DENTIST
DR. J. T. HEDGES, MGR.
PHONf WAL. Kit i i9 1-2 N. BROADWAY
HIGH SPOTS TO LAMP
For the fanatic who sits in
the lookout there are a certain
number of high spots to lamp in
the early stages of the conflict
which will have an important
bearing upon the two races. For
example:
What effect 4ft years and 18
campaign will have upon Hans
Wagner?
What effect 39 years and 18
campaigns will have upon Na-
poleon Lajoie?
What form Joe Wood will as-
sume after a long lay-off season
and a complete separation from
Lis appendix?
t What assistance Ed Walsh
** will be able to furnish Russell,
Cicotte and Scott?
What machine morale Hank
O’Day will be able to instil in-
to the Cubs?
How Griff's new pitchers will
be able to help out Johnson and
Boehling?
Whether Koney, Mowrey and
Harmon will more than sup-
plant Robinson, Wilson, Butler
and Miller?
How well McGraw has been
able to plug that gap at third
with both Shafer and Herzog
missing?
Hats Worn at a Saucy Angle
^3^
1
;
■
IHftRNATONALHAIVESrEk
»
OKLAHOMA AST GLASS
& MIRROR CO.
MANUFACTURERS OF ALL KINDC OF
ORNAMENTAL LEADED GLASS
AND MIRRORS
PLATE, WINDUW AND PRISM GLASS
PHONE WALNUT 5097
428 W. MAIN ST. OKLAHOMA CITY,
Manager Joe Birmingham.
! lse of similar tricks at third base to
prevent d p^tout,” said Birmy. “I will
admit the new rule was designed to
cover just such cases, but the um-
pires are interpreting it too strictly.
There can be no harm in a coacher
stepping forward and touching a run-
ner as he conies into a base. Signals
and instructions a;e often given in
this way.”
Daly Give* Advice.
Tom Daly, once a leading National
league catcher, who is coaching the
Yankees’ pitchers, says the secret of
good box work is putting the ball over
or near the corners of the plate as
often as possible. Daly goes back into
baseball history to prove that tto
greatest pitchers were those who mas-
tered control and always kept the bats-
man.‘a the hole. He says that a cur-
ver who «ets two strikes on a batter
with as many pitched balls, holds the
whip hand, whereas the boxman who
finds himself in a fix with “three and
two” usually comes to grief when he
puts the next one over. “Get a grip
on the man at the plate right off the
reel,” says the veteran coach, "and
he’ll do the worrying, not you.”
'<m ,..v
McGraw’s Influence.
Pecause Branch Rickey said there
should be no poker playing by his
players, the scribes set up a loud I
ruffaw about Sunday school methods. :
| Then Frank Chance and John Mc-
Graw laid down similar rules and
the same scribes immediately saw the
wisdom of it.
Oklahoma
Gas Engine Co.
317-323 Western Ave.
AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING
Finest Machinery and Equip-
ment. Experienced Mechanics.
Welding by Experienced Me-
chanics.
WE WILL TRY TO FLEASE
YOU.
Wanted^ /Isr to Learn the
fFew wreki complete*: practical
instructions; unlimited practice:
tools donated; positions guaran-
teed; futures furnished forsli p,
ieduced tuition price;wases while
learning: diplomas granted : write
for catalogue. Sen wash Svstkv. .-e
Baansa Coi.uiaaa 106 W California
trenue (iklaliomr. <'ity Oklahoma
SCHWARZE
BARBER COLLEGE
Miner Brown Is Optimistic.
Miner Brown has high hopes that
the St Louis Feds will win the pen-
nunt. Branch Rickey and Miller Hug-
gins, his fellow' managers in the same
town, don’t even dare hope, much less
tav so In public.
GETTING HEftOY 7t
THE Fill 11 PARK
Tenney Starts Factory.
Fred Tenney, one time the best
first baseman in the game, and who
has been engaged in the shoe busi-
ness in Lynn, Mass., has severed his
?onnection with his old firm, and is
going to erect a big factory of his
own in Paris, Me., to make a different
brand of shoes.
The REFRESHING
DRINK
It’s better in bottles
because it is always
perfectly mixed
with Puritas Water
5c
Per Bottle Everywhere
BOTTLED BY
Coco-Cola Bottling
Company
25 WEST THIRD
Oklahoma City
Ralph Rose Stock Company is Re-
hearsing and Will Present “Wal-
lingford” as Opening Pir^i at Fair
Park Theater Next Sunday.
When the Fair Park theater opens
next Sunday at the state fair grounds
with the Ralph Rose Stock company
playing the famous bill, “Get-Rich-
Quick Wallingford,” it is said that
Oklahoma City theater goers will see
the best production of the piece that
has ever been given by any other
than' a regular “Wallingford” com-
pany.
Rehearsals by the new company
started last week and have been al-
most perfected into the play. The
special scenery', including the street
I scenes with the moving street car,
the hotel interior and others has been
made and will be equal to that of the
original company, it is said. The
brass band will also be in evidence
and the compafly will endeavor to
place the play before the public in
a most creditable manner.
The members who make up the cast
have been assigned to their respec-
tive parts. Palmer Gillette, leading
man, w\l play the part of J. Rufur
Wallingford, and Miss Patti MdKin-
ley will be seen as Fanny Jasper.
The others are Blanchard McKee as
Blaekie Daw; Nell Walker as Doro-
thy Wells; Herbert H. Powers, as
Eddie Lamb; Helen Levinson, as Ger-
tie Dempsy; L. Fred Stein, as Clint
Harkins; Maud Harris, as Bessie
Meers; Ralph Rose, as G. W. Battles; I
Frederick Clark, as Donohue; Van
B. Adams, as Andy Dempsy; Ger-
trude Stone, as Mrs. Dempsy; Clar-
ence Doty, as Richard Wells; Harry |
C. Davis, as Gunther; Fred Gleason,
as Tim Battles; Minnie Louise Las-
kin, as Willie; Gladys Clark, as Jane;
George Neff, as Judge Lampton; Jack
Forrest, as E. B. Lott, and Jap and
bulldog, by themselves.
Wallace Shows Speed.
Bobby Wallace, despite his years, is
said to be showing more speed and
life at shortstop with the Browns than
any of the younger members of the
team, and is counted upon as likely to
be the regular shortstop despite his
years. Wallace was out most of last
season because of a bad arm.
HAVE REGULAR MENDING DAY
By Employment of System, Drudgery
of Necessary Repairing May Large-
ly Be Done Away With.
“There is nothing in the world like
system, and nowhere does one realize
this more than in the matter of dress.”
Thus writes one woman, who thinks
that the woman who puts off mending
the tiny hole she might have attended
to in ten minutes is laying up much
trouble for herself when the little hole
becomes undarnable. The rip under
the arm in the blouse that hardly
shows when it is put on extends
alarmin|ly, and there is usually a day
of reckoning for all put-off things of
the same kind.
The remedy for this is a regular
mending day or a mending evening, If
a woman is engaged in business. Se-
lect the best day for this purpose and
stick to it; you will be surprised to
find that your clothing will not only
look better but also last longer. As
soon as a garment needs mending put
It aside for the mending day that is
coming.
naID-SUMMER hats, gay with flow-
ill ers, are worn at a tilt. Either
they are posed at the right and lifted
at the left with upturned brim c. ihey
incline over the eyes and are high
at the back. Flowers fill in the
brims and spaces at the lifted portions
of the brim. Or they are used in
other positions on the hat with rib-
bons filling in at the side or back.
Flowers are pre-eminent in summer
millinery. Roses of silk or muslin or
gauze vie with those of the garden in
beauty.
Two examples of flower-trimmed
hats are given here that are distinc-
tive and tasteful enough to command
admiring attention in any gathering.
They are medium in size, and beauti-
fully shaped. Not all shapes can be
worn, at the saucy angle which is so
captivating on youthful wearers, and
unless the hat is made with this pose
in view, the tilt is out of place and
not attractive.
At the top and right of the picture
the same hat is shown in two views. It
is of leghorn straw, with brim rolling
up at the left side. The entire crown
is covered with lovely gauze roses in
white, with a blush of pink toward
their centers.
At the left four ruffles of lace, edged
with a narrow strip of leghorn braid,
are placed against the crown. They
repeat the line of the brim and add
the requisite height to the crown.
There is a drape of blue velvet rib-
bon about the crown, with a bow at
the side. In this particular hat the
bow is placed at a daring angle sel-
dom found in the graceful millinery
of the season.
A pretty hat, covered with moire,
is shown in the second figure. It is
the simplest of round sailor, trimmed
with plaitings of moire ribbon and
a w'reath of roses, forget-me-nots and
wheat. The long flower wreath is
carried over the brim to the bandeau
and terminates at the back. A long
sash of moire falls from a bow on the
bandeau.
She who aspires to wearing a hat
much tilted to the side must be very
sure that her style will carry it off.
A little tilt is becoming to almost
every wearer, but a pronounced angle
is out of the question for some faces.
JULIA BOTTOMLEY
NAVAL AVIATORS SCOUT AROUND VERA CRUZ
L>uwu ut Vera Cruz the aviators of the navy have been giving the first
| demonstration of their value in connection with military operations. Lieut.
| 1*. N. L. H*Jllnger and his aids have made flights over the city and the sur-
rounding country,-with the especial object of ascertaining whsthar the bridges
| of tb® /ailway to Mexico City are still intact.
Scotch Cakes.
One pound dark brown sugar, half
pound butter and lard, two eggs, one
tablespoonful soda dissolved in luke-
warm water, one ounce cinnamon, one
pound flour. Roll out rather thin and
bake in a moderate oven.
Some Useful Hint*.
Perfumed olive oil sprinkled on li-
bnry .helve. will prevent mold on
books; mud stains can be removed
from black cloth by rubbing with a
raw potato; the Juice of a raw onion
applied to the sting of an Insect will
lemove the poison.
To Keep Celery Fresh.
To keep celery fresh and crisp, so
that It will last for dayB, treat it in
the following manner and find it ex-
cellent: Prepare it as you would for
the table, then wet an old piece of
clean linen in ice-cold water, place
the celery in it and lay on the Ice.
J
Savory Sauce.
Take two ounces of salt pork, bacon
or sausage. If bacon or pork Is used,
cut It into small pieces. Heat until
crisp but not burned. In the fat which
fries out of the meat, cook a small
amount of finely chopped onion and
red or green pepper, being careful not
*t.o burn them. Add one cup of thick
tomato juice or a larger amount of
uncooked juice, and cook the mixture
! until It is reduced to a smaller amount.
Reason with salt To this sauce ca-
! pers, mushrooms or finely chopped
| pickle may be added.
T. M. FLANARY
Don’t Guess — Find Out
You want the best business education possible, don’t
you?JITo get this you must attend the best business
TRAINING SCHOOL. They are different-Find out
Why Different
Course of work, methods used, men in charge, are a
few of the reasons. OUR SCHOOL is right here in
OKLAHOMA CITY. Come to see us, investigate—
Find out.
Good Positions
We get them and our graduates can hold them. There
is a reason for the success of the DRAUGHON COL-
LEGE. Investigate—Find out. Phone W 392 or write
Draughon Business College
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Neat Bales Sell Best
■jV/TUCII depends on those two features of the Inter-
T »-L national Motor Hay Press called the bale tension
and the spring roller tucker. Your bales sell best when
they are all of one size and weight, solid and compact, neat
iu appearance, with no ragged edges. When you look over the I H C
motor press you will &L3 how much these two strong details have to do
with your hay profits.
1 H C motor presses all have self feeders that keep your feet out of
danger, and by tneir regular operation increase the capacity. You will
find the same strong points on all three sizes of the cress.
The 1 H C engine on the motor press will work for you all year
round. Separate it from the press and you have a regular portable
outfit to run any other power machines about the farm.
Drop iu some day aud let us explain the merits oi this press.
H. N. Knight Imp. & Supply Co.
West Calif
oma City,
110-112 West California Ave.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Highest Quality
Our paints are all guaranteed to be the beat If you are going to
paint or paper your home thi* spring, talk It over with ua first. We
save you money.
Leech Paint and Glass Co.
SUCCESSORS TO A. M. HUGHE'S
118 W. GRAND AVE. PHONE WALNUT 204
Fresh Paint Made to Your Order-
Direct from Manufacturer to Consumer. Made of the best lead,
best Jersey zinc and pure linseed oil, ground and mixed through
the latest and most modern machinery.
Our factory is right here in Oklahoma, therefore our five year
guarantee means something to you.
1914 WALL PAPER
and Painter’s Supplies at lowest prices.
Weatherproof Paint Mfg. Co.
B. GOERLITZ. Prop. Phone Walnut 4 1 4
21-23 N. HUDSON ST. OKLAHOMA CITY
SPRAYING
FRUIT TREES,
rnun I i
Easier to SJso
Cheaper to Use
BABBITT’S LYE
IN THE
NEW SIFTER CAN
UST as much as
you want—no more
—comes out of the
new sifting top. You
add a lot of water, and
the strongest cleanser
known is ready for u se.
It is liquid muscle.
Wherever there is
dirt, wherever germs
breed, wherever there
is an offensive odor—
for house, barn, any-
where—there is noth-
ing that can equal it
in effectiveness.
Highest in Strength
But Not in Price
10c
You Use Less—I! Lasts Longer
B. T. BABBITT
P. O. 3ox!778 New York City
iiimii■ i■ ii miirrnn------
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Rugan, E. E. The Capitol Hill News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 21, 1914, newspaper, May 21, 1914; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc860727/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.