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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1906)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1906. Why Ph - Castoria O T7"v - v .Re ysicians commenci C ASTORIA has met with pronounced, favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. . The extended use of Cas toria is unquestionably the result of three facts : First The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food : Third -It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil. It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system not by stupefying it and our readers are entitled to the information. Haiv Journal of Health. mm XVegetablePreparatioafor As similating dcroodatulRegula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of m Promotes Digcsdon.Cheer ful ness and Rest.Contai ns neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not "Narcotic. Jiaaft afOldBrSAMUIZPITCBEB Hurtn A perfect Remedy forConstipa fion. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. I"a - The Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi tations and 44 Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children E xperience against Experiment. GENUINE Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr.W. Ii. Leister, of Kogers, Ark., . says: "As a practicing physician I use Castoria and like it very much.' Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y., says : "I have used your Castoria for several years in my practice and have found it a 6af e and reliable remedy." Dr. Kaymond M. Evarts, of Santa iYnez, Cal., says: "After using your Castoria for children for year3 it annoys me greatly to have an igi norant druggist substitute some thing else, especially to the patient's disadvantage, as in this case. I en close herewith the wrapper of the imitation." Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary prepara tions, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Cas toria in my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recommendation of Castoria." Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, N. H., says : "I use your Castoria in my practice, and in my family." Dr. We J. McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of. thir teen children I certainly know some thing about your great medicine and aside from my own family experi ence, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and effi cient remedy in almost every home." Dr. Howard James, of New York City, says : "It is with great pleasure that I desire to testify to the medici nal virtue of your Castoria. I have used it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent results from its administration to other children in my practice." Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel phia, Pa., says: "The name that' your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical pro fession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excel lent remedy.''' Dr. B. HaMead Scott, of Chicago, 111., says: "I have prescribed your Oaatoria often for infants during my practice and find it very satis factory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve land , Ohio, says : "Your Castoria stands first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place." Dr. E. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich:, says: "I prescribe your Cas toria extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for chil dren's troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's." Dr. Channing H. Cook, of Saint Louis, Mo., 6ays : "I have used your Castoria for several years past in ray own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a great consideration in view of the fact that most medicines of this character are obnoxious and there fore difficult of administration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything that I ever prescribed." BliilliSil GASTOR SI Bears the Signature of "JI!!l!i!l!IE!lI!!l!ni!ll!n!l!!!l!OIII!!!!nillim!!Iin!!!I!fira 'ntgfmnnimmi Dr. XL 0. Morgan, of So. Amboy, N. J., says : "I prescribe your Casto ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with better effect than I receive from any other combination of drugs." Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, K . Y., says : "I have used your Castoria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for many years. The formula is ex cellent." Dr. Wm. L'. Bosserrnan, of Buf falo, N. Y., says : "I anf pleased to speak a good word for your Castoria. I think 60 highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family." Dr. F. H. .Kyle, of St. Paul, Minn., says : "It affords me pleasure to add my name to the long list of those who have used and now en dorse your Castoria. The fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on tho wrapper is one good and sufficient reason for the recommendation of any physician. I know of its good qualities and recommend it cheerfully." ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN km I H ULMPJAA K UU 111 I LIIHMI IU by WON GHlGAGu White Sox and Cubs Cover Windy City With Base ball Glory. CLOSE FINISH FOR THE SOX Comiskey and Chance Lauded as Two Greatest Managers Rain Storm at St. Louis Cinches Victory for Sox. u i t.iHA.OVJ, Wl f. luircvi.. tut HID u ! ftr-Kt tim in the hlstorv of the baseball world, two pennants have been, won by the same city In a season, and this honor goes to Chicago. On next Tuesday the Cubs and the White Sox will begin the battle to decide the championship of the ' worid tor 1906. The race for the American League pen- '.nant tills year was a sensational one, la Vwhloh Chicago, New York and Cleveland iiad a fighting chance until five days be fore the season closed. When rain pre vented the Sox and Browns from playing Rt St. Louis last Thursday and New York broke even in a dual contest with Phila delphia, the pennant was cinched for the Comiskey aggregation and a fight that surpassed ail other baseball contests in the history of the game closed. , The race was not nearly so exciting in the National League, for the Cubs were proclaimed the winners of the pennant In the Pulliam organization on Septem- ' ber 19. Long before that tho fans had figured that at the clip Chance s men were going all season it would be a great miracle that would deprive them of the honor, so interest was on the wane for nearly a month. But in the American League the race was so exciting that the enthusiasts were on the edge all the time. Ovation Given tho Sox. There was great rejoicing in Chicago when It became known that the Sox were also winners. Chicago bore the great t honor modestly and immediately started preparations for the seven games for the . championship of the world. The White Sox returned home the day after they at-, won the victory and were tendered a reat ovation. The Cubs will not reach ' home until Monday morning, and they will then have a chance to accept the , congratulations that will be showered upon themi ' The last National League championship captured by Chicago was in liio. when the famous old White Stockings team, led by Captain Anson, brought the flag West through the work of a nine whose fame will last as long as baseball is talked of. Charles Comiskey, president of the Sox, Is old at the penant-winning business, as he won four in a row in the (eighties, one when he was In charge of the St. Louis Browns, and three in Chicago. The "Old Roman" considers this a great victory, for the last three flags he captured for ' the Browns came easy, as the team was . at the top from the beginning or tne i ' ' season. But not so with the Sox this 'time. Tby. hegan their .meteoric career on July' 2T, "when they returned home from the Kast after a disastrous trip, and were in fourth position. But the team got a winning streak and tucked away nine teen consecutive victories. This record broke the great run of victories made by the Giants in 1904 and the Baltimore Ori oles in ISM by two games, and came with in one game of equaling the world's rec ord, held by the Providence Grays since ISM. The team was then at the top of the league, and Chorniskey declared that it would win the championship in a close race. Cubs Stronger Yearly. Ever since 1902 the Cubs have been grad ually growing stronger. That year they finished fourth in the race. When Chance became manager last year, he had a fairly balanced team with only a few weak spots, which he straightened during the winter by trades that astonished the baseball world. His pitchers were in fine fettle all season and, backed up ty a strong Infield and some heavy hitters, they began winning at the start and kept the pace until they cinched the bunting. Ste'.nfeldt, the third baseman, has de veloped Into one of the grandest fielders in the game, and with Tinker. Evers and Chance a strong infield was formed. The outfield warf the best in the league. To Jim Hart, who brought Frank Selee here to begin a wonderful team and who retained Frank Chance through early dis couraging years; to President -Charles Murphy, whose deals and daring in trades rounded out the work of others; to Manager Chance, who asked for cham pionship material, got it and led it bril liantly, and to Trainer McCormick belong the credit of the success of the National League team. The story of the growth of the team is one of the most romantic in the history of baseball, bringing out as it does the qualities of fair play and final success. But just as much credit Is due to the White Sox. Rise or the White Sox. Chicago has held the center of the stage most of the time in the making of Amer ican League history. Its White Sox have won three of the seven championships de cided and have been an important factor in all but one of the other four. In the seven years of the league's existence the Sox finished first three times, second once, a close third once, fourth once and seventh once. Boston and Philadelphia took the other four pennants, each team winning the flag twice. When the new league broke into Chi cago in 1900 Charles A. Comiskey, the or ganizer and owner of the White Sox. brought with him from St. Paul the stars of his Western League Club, and with more recruits landed a championship his first season. The American League waged war upon its rival, the -old National League the following Winter, and in 1901 Comiskey had secured many of the stars of the Chicago National's team and other teams of the rival league, and with his new aggregation of stars another pen nant was won for, the tall flagpole on the South Side grounds. Victory in Final Game in 1904. The two next seasons were unfortunate, the Cubs finishing fourth in one and seventh in the other. A thorough scouring of minor leagues for new material brought the White Sox together in 1904 with a wealth of ma terial and until the final week of a whirl wind campaign the Sox were running neck and neck with Boston and New York, the Bostons, then champions of the world, carrying off the pennant on the final day of the season by defeating New York in one game of a double header. An even more spectacular race was made by the Sox in 1905, when, after a late start, they made a. desperate effort to snatch the pennant from the Phila delphia Athletics and fell short by only two games. ' Consigned by some of the critics to a berth in the second division this year, the Sox surprised everybody except their owner by the most phenomenal winning streak In modern baseball history and shot from a poor fourth into the leader ship of the league. VICTORY FOR THE DALLES CLUB Snatched From Bunker Hill Eleven Near the End ot the Play. THE DALLES. Or., Oct. 7. (Special.) Another victory was added to the score of the as yet undefeated Colum bia team today when they met the Portland Bunker Hill eleven on the home gridiron. The score was 6 to 6 in favor of the home team. The teams were well matched in weight and play, every inch of ground being stoutly defended and fought for. The Dalles won the kick-oft in the first half and, though badly handicapped by the ab sence of their halfback, McCoy, man aged, through good generalship and brilliant play of their captain, Murray, to hold the first haif down to no score. In the second half Portland took the ball, almost Immediately scoring a touchdown, and until within one min ute of the end, it looked as though the Columblas had met their first defeat. At this crisis McCoy, who had come in on the second half, by a series of magnificent line plunges carried the ball around the end and scored a touchdown, the goal being barely kicked before time was called. The play was slow throughout the game, although the weather conditions and gridiron were perfect. KILLED OVER DICE GAME PRIVATE AXDERSOX SAYS HE SHOT IX SELF-DEFEXSE. Slayer Alleges Sergeant Brlder At tempted Assault With a Rock When He Shot! VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. (Spe cial.) Thomas Anderson, who"killedSer geant Anthony Brider last night at Welgle's saloon, was turned over to Sheriff Bert Blesecker this morning and locked up in the county Jail and will await trial for murder. He told Biesecker that he acted in self det'ense; that the quarrel originated over a dice game, culminating in- Brlder In viting him out in the back yard to fight. When they got there, he says. Brider grabbed a rock and started for him, when, Anderson says, he shot him twice with a revolver. There does not seem to have been any motive for the deed except a slight quar rel the two men had over the dice game, which was aggravated to a considerable extent by drink. They met as friends in the saloon and indulged in a drinking bout. Anderson is said to be of a quar relsome disposition when drinking. Hundreds Coming to the Fair; LBWISTON, Idaho, Oct. 7. (Special.) Incoming trains today have brought hun dreds of people to the city, who are here to attend the opening of the seventh an nual Lewiston-Clarkston T'-mcrvcw the Governors of two spates will partici pate in the coronation exercises and a c vlr -parade, a feature of which will be 100 high school girls on horseback. Governor Gooding, of Idaho, arrived this afternoon and Governor Mead, of Washington, will arrive in the morning tilth a delegation of 150 members .-t the Spokane Chamber of Commerce. Tomor row evening the Lewlston Commercial Club will entertain the city's distin guished guests at a smoker in the Ma sonic Temple. SEVENTH 111 AID FOR BEAVERS Henderson Goes Into a Trance and the Angels Cinch the Game. WANNER IS A WONDER Rock Islander Joins the McCredie Aggregation and Gives a Good Sample of His Work at Second Base. PACIFIC COAST LEAGCE. Yesterday's Results. Portland, 1; Los Angeles, Seattle. 6-4, Oakland, 4-2. San Francisco, 8; Fresno, 5. Standing of the Clubs. Won. Lost. P. C. Portland If 4U .6&0 Seattle K5 73 .538 San Francisco hi 72 .530 Lob Angeles S3 78 .512 Oakland 66- 06 .411 Fresno 63 106 LOS ANGELES, Oct. 7. (Special V Henderson, the best pitcher in the league, sneaked over a look at a dame in the grandstand In the seventh inning, and while he was sizing that up he passed two Looloos, hit another in the arm and was swatted for two swipes to the out field, all this netting the locals three runs and the game. There was nothing to choose between Bergeman and Hender son, for each pitched beautiful ball. McCredle's new second baseman, Johnny Wanner, turned up from the Rock Island team and was at second. He Is the goods, making the only run on a pass, a wild pitch. Lister's single and Henderson's fly to center. He is about the size of Toman or Johnny Kane, covers a world of ground and is not afraid to fight the ball. The game was a beautiful one, and one of the biggest crowds of the season was there, over 3000. There was not a sign of an error, and the sport was exciting from start to finish. The score: LOS ANGELES. AB. R. IB. TO. A. E. Bernard, cf . .......4 O 1 5 1 q Gochnauer. as S o 0 a n Cravath, rf. 2 0 0 1 0 O Brashear. 3b. 3 o 1 3 n X Dillon, lb. 4 0 o 9 o o Carlisle, If 3 1 0 0 0 0 Toman. 2b 4 1 l 3 i n Buckley, c 2 1 1 6 J O Bergeman, p. ..2 0 1 c 1 o Total 27 3 6 2T 11 - 0 PORTLAND. AB. R. IB. PO. A. B Sweeney. s. 2 0 1 2 2 6 McHale, cf -.4 O 0 6 0 o Mitchell, if 4 0 2 8 0 o McCredie. rf 4 0 1 - 1 o O Smith. 3b 4 0 O 3 1 o Donahue, c 3 0 O 4 2 0 Wanner. 2b 2 1 0 1 3 0 Lister, lb 3 0 2 5 1 o Henderson, p. 3 0 1 o 0.0 Totals .28 1 T 24 o SCORB EY IXXINGS. Los Anccles 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 3 Hits O 0 1 1 O 21 5 Portland 0 OOO100O o 1 Hits 2 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 07 SUMMARY. Two-bess hits Bergeman. Mitchell. Sacri fice hits Sweeney. Cravath. Left on bases Lob Angeles, 7, Portland. 4. Bases on bails Off Bergeman, 1; oft Henderson, 6. Struck out By Bergeman. 5; by Henderson, 3. Dou ble plays Gochnauer to Toman to Dillon: Bernard to Buckley. Stolen bases Cravath. Brashear. McCredie. Wild pitch Bergeman. Hit by pitcher Buckley. Time of game One hour and 45 minutes. Umpire Perrine. . Seattle Takes Both Games. OAKLAND, Oct. 7. Seattle defeated Oakland twice today. The morning game was close, but the Northerners won out with two timely hits in the last Inning. Seattle practically broke up the afternoon game in the first inning, when they landed for two doubles - by Householder and Streib, which netted three runs, with the assistance of two errors. McKune was the star of both games, fielding faultlessly and scoring five hits out of seven times at bat. The scores: First game R.H.B. Seattle 00001021 15 13 2 Oakland '. ..3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 S 2 Batteries Garvin and Blankenship; Graham and Bliss. Second game R.H.E. Seattle 3 0000001 0-4 9 0 Oakland 0 0100001 02 7 6 Batteries Vickers and Blankenship; Cates and Bliss. Umpire Mahaffey. Seals Victors In Eolji Games. FRESNO. Cal., Oct. ".San Francisco won both games from Fresno today. Poor work in the box. combined with very costly errors, lost the first game for Fresno. Ed Blank, a seven-foot busher from Lemoore, was on the slab for Fresno in the first three innings of the second game. The Seals touched him up for three in the third, which netted two runs. Score: First game R.H.E. San Francisco 03001002 410 16 1 Fresno 00002001 5 8 14 5 Batteries Welch. Brown and "Wilson; Fitzgerald and Hogan. Second game R.H.E. San Francisco 002600 18 6 3 Fresno 103010 05 5 2 Batteries Brown and Spies: Hoag, Blank and Hogan. Umpire Derrick. AMERICAN" LEAGCE. Standing of the Clubs. Won. Loet. P. C. Chicago 83 6S .620 Keu York - 00 1 .535 Cleveland 69 64 .54.1 Philadelphia "3 67 .538 St. Louis 74 75 .437 Detroit - 71 78 .474 Washington - 35 05 ..W Boston . .' 49 105 .317 Detroit 6, Chicago 1. CHICAGO, Oct. 7. Detroit's victory to day over Chicago brought the American League season to a close here. The score: Chicago 1 6 S Detroit ........8 11 1 Batteries Flenn and Sullivan; Killaln and Payne. Cleveland 7, St. Louis S. ST. LOUI3, Oct. 7. Cleveland won from the home team today in a great batting game. The score: St. Louis 3 10 2 Cleveland . 7 12 0 Batteries Smith -and Spencer; Lleb hardt and Clarke. NATIOXAIj league. Pittsburg 7, Cincinnati 2. CINCINNATI, oct. t Fittsburg wonj the final game of the season from Cin cinnati today through superior hitting The game was slow and featureless. Tho score: R.H E.I R.H.E. Cincinnati .. .2 6 2 Pittsburg 7 10 0 Batteries Esslck and Schlel; Leever and Peitz. Umpire O'Day. St. Loui9 3. Chicago 3. -v ST. LOUIS. Oct 7. Chicago and St. Louis today played a tie game, called after the eleventh inning on account of darkness. The score: R.H.E.I R.H.E. St. Louis 3 8 1 Chicago 3 10 2 Batteries McGlynn and Noonan; Over all and Moran. Umpire Carpenter. MAIXTEXOX WINS GREAT RACE American Horse an Easy Victor Over French and British Champions. PARIS. Oct. 7. W. K. Vanderbllt's Maintenon won the last great classic race of the season at Longchamps this after noon, the Prix du Conseil Municipal of $20,000, beating J. Lieux's Punta Gorda by three-quarters of a length. There were ten starters. The superb weather attracted an enor mous and brilliant gathering of an inter national character to witness the meet ing of the American, British and French champions. Maintenon, Bachelor's But ton and Punta Gorda Maintenon led -throughout the race. The English horse did not get a place. Contest of Women Golfers. WEST NEWTON. Mass.. Oct. 7 More than three score of women golfers from all parts of the country will participate to morrow in the opening or preliminary round of the twelfth National champion ship, and the player who successfully passes through the ordeal, which extends through the week, will receieve the cham pionsip gold medal, and the club will have for the next year the Robert Cox cup. now held by the Oakley Country Club, of Boston, of which Miss Pauline Mackay, the present title-holder, is a member. A remarkable double, wedding has been celebrated In a Viennese church. A manu facturer named Muller married a widow, wnile at the same time his son married the widow's daughter Thus the father be comes the father-in-law of his own son, and the mother also the mother-in-law of her daughter ESTABLISHED 23 YEARS IX PORTLAND. WE CURE MEN FOR CONSULTATION FREE We'll treat any single uncomplicated ailment for $12.50. DNDER ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE NO PAY UNLESS CURED It will not coat you anytblnsr to call at our office and conBUlt us, and by so dolus It may Rave you . muofa time, worry and money, and becauue if we cannot cure you we will honestly tell you ho, and you will not be under any financial obligation to us. We cure all forms of Blood and Skin Disease, Brain Fajc. Varicose or Knotted Veins, NervouM ' Decline, Piles. Fistula, Kidney, Bladder and all Urinary Dltteaaen due to Weakneu, inheritance and exhaustion and the result of apecinc diseases. Gonorrhoea cured in seven days. Before taking treatment elsewhere. Investigate our claims and forma of treatment as to merit and superiority. Talk with the physicians of this institution and you will find them cultured, scientillo gentlemen o arreat learning and experience and a ftw moments' conversation will convince you that we thoroughly understand our business. Nervous Dcbllityj There is not a man in existence who is suffering from debility that we cannot heln. and after we have cured -a case of this kind there will never again be a sign of weakness except brought on by imprudence. . Rheumatism, both acute and chronic forms, cured without using; any poisonous drugs or in any way Injuring the system. Acute and Chronic Discbarges, viz. : Gonorrhoea, Prostatic Diseases, cured by the use of the only scientific method known, injurious to tho Bystem in no way. shape or form: but, on the contrary, it builds up the system and the diseased part returns to a sound and healthy condition. We also cure all forms of Skin Diseases, Vlcers, Nervous Troubles, Kidney and Bladder Diseases, Ulcers, Stricture and Varicocele. We wish to lav special stress upon our method of treating; Blood Poison and Syphilis without using mercury. Our fee being so low it enables many who are afflicted to procure the highest scientific medical assistance. Terms made to suit if neces sary, so that everyone need not go without treatment and be cured. Those who are afflicted with such troubles and are In a position where they cannot pay us a visit, we assure you tnat our home treatment is efficient and we have cured hundreds at home. We Want Every Man in the Country Who Is Afflicted to Write Us About Bis Ailment. WE CURE YOU AT HOME. HOURS 8 TO 5, 7 TO 8:30 DAILY; SUNDAYS. 9 TO 12. St. Louis Medical and Surgical Dispensary CORNER SECOND AND YAMHILL STREETS, PORTLAND. OREGON.