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PAGE TWO THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, WEDNESDAY MORNING,-MARCII 31, 1915 11 WHITE SOX INVADE TODAY F0H SALARIED FANS TO CARRY BURDEN OF PUTTING BASE GAME WITH ISA BALL NEED UP TO PHOENIX Small Meeting But Lots, of Enthusiasm Great Ad vertising to Be Secured for Merchants by Their Employes "If Phoenix liiis baseball, it will be Jecause a few young cliaps about town dorks and employes go after it and jtet it." In tbrtl rather bitter arraignment of the sluggish businessmen, who are the ones to profit most by the advertising resulting from league baseball here, Vtarnet K. Marks, a baseballistically in clined attorney last night started things at the meagerly attended meeting of fans. Now, if nijy success is to attend the efforts of the few boosters to get a team in the league, it will be because these clerks and wage-earners will in spire their bosses with the git-up-and git spirit. According to the sentiment expressed last night. With less than a score of fans in the room, the outlook was as dark as Paul J. Langovvski's visage yesterday when he thought it would rain on his White Sox-M?sa game. Marks led off the speaking with a few hot shots into the camp of the staid businessman. He recognized their desire to retrench at this particular time, and he excused it fully, but he couldn't help letting slip a little irony at the comparison between the interest displayed by the sixty dol lar a month counter jumper and the merchant prince who employed him. Then little Artie Rick got on his large Hat feet and proceeded to pour a lot of ulang into tho overheated atmosphere, lie referred to baseball as. the grandest sport in the world, not even barring boss racing. He said a baseball team would win Phoenix more publicity than even tho Columbia theater was getting and he Kicked The Republican man be neath the table as he said it. Then he went to the mat with the dead ones, who can't nerve themselves up to but into a baseball open meeting unless presented with a cutely engraved invi tation. Hester admitted freely that the out look would have to be much brighter before he could have very much time s Smokers of Turkish Trophies Cigarettes fifteen years ago are smokers of Turkish Trophies Cigarettes today! MdmafllieHijht Cn&TuriiA mJEfrpian Ggmtles In tfitVirfd for baseball in Phoenix. But when most of the pitiful score warmly pledg ed their best efforts to back the move ment, and to get all the dust cleared out of the atmosphere, he said he would st-ck, and put a ball club in Phoenix if it took a leg. - Harry Johnson, who presided, called off the names of the fans who may be depended upon to work with a commit tee in securing support for the ball club. They are as follows: B. E. .Marks, J. B. Rickards, K. J. Monahan, C. E Heath, George Ellas, Fred Hudson, Mr Parker, L. F. Sweet ing, Arthur Luhrs, Dr. John Dunlap, Al Williams, John Hyder, Ed Rudolph, Vic Hanny, J C. Adams, Dave Goldberg, Homer King, H. Clay Parker, C. M. Spellman, P. H. Hayes, Lcbbeus Chap man, H. H. Braxton, Tom Trent, Warren McArthur, Bill Horrell, Leslie Hardy, Dr. E. W. Baum, Oscar Irvin, Tom Shaughnessy, Jack Bolin, E. E. Anderson, Paul Geary, Francis Geary, Dr. Redewill, H. R. Tritle, M. R. Boyce, Frank P. Trott, Claude Hannan, Guy Lawrence, Eugene Goldman, Guy Alsap, Hugh Marshall, H. L. Aller, W. D. O'Neil, Dr. Monical, Eddie Doyle, Con P. Cronin, George Byers, J. E. Gil len. W. H. Swope, C. R. Bone, Parker L. Woodman. Ox PORTLAND IS 3-1 nil The Big Leaguers to Arrive Early in Morning Will See the City in Parade Through Streets Before Going to Park Last Year's Winners Put It Over Angels, While Rain Stops Show at 'Frisco and Snow Keeps Salt: Lake Quiet ' (Associated Press Dispatch) LOS ANGELES, March oO. Portland won the open ing game of the Pacific Coast League, season 1915, by de feating Lo"s Angeles, 3 to 1, in a fast contest. It was the only game tlayed, rain preventing Oak land and San Francisco from playing at the exposition city, and snow at Salt Lake kept Venice and the Salt Lake "Bees indoors. R H E Portland 3 8 0 Los Angeles 1 8 2 Batteries Portland : Ilig ginbotham and Fisher; Los Angeles: Perritt, Ryan, and Pole?. BY SCOOP The result of today's baseball game is not much doubt, but the attend ance is likely to be as astonishingly large as though two of the closest matched teams in the world were fighting for a pennant. Never be fore has the advent of a team of homing leaguers created so much interest here, as this training-trip inpearance of the Chicago Americans; with Charles Comiskey his own self on the offing. Manager C. H. Rowland of Hie White Sox wired Manager Paul .7. Langowski of the -Jewels to the effect that "The White Sox will arrive in Phoenix at six-twenty tomorrow morning. Please meet the train." So that famous leader of the Mesa contingent will have to rise earlier this fair day than he has risen since he stopped working for a living. Today's program will be more like that of a circus than a mere ball game. To start with, the Sox vrill be led downtown to the restaurants for breakfast, and to their hotel for a brush-up. Then, at 12:30, they will be packed in automobiles for a. ride about town, following a lot of band music, being dispensed by the In dian school band. At one o'clock, they will swing the gates at River side park wide open to allow niore'n a million fan-fold to get in. Auto mobiles will be parked all around the diamond, and the grandstand will be opened even to the boxes. which will be equipped with nice newly (but not fresh) painted chairs. At 2:45, Umpire Jim Murray . of the American Association and well known here by reason of his several winters passed in the city will growl the signal at the pitcher, and Mister Edward Collins, late of the $100,000 infield of C. Mack, will amble up to the bat to face Monsieur Cicottc, who will temporarily transfer his allegiance from the Comiskey crewH to the Jewels. Mesa Enthused - Never before in the history of Mesa has there been such baseball' enthusiasm. The town has long been acclaimed as a baseball center but even in its palmiest days it has n?ver known what it means to be attacked with, a genuine epidemic of baseball itis. Banks, stores-and offices will close during the afternoon so that everyone including the boss, can take a day off and root for the Msa Gems in line against the big league players from Chicago. The indications are at present, that there will be but one place of bu siness remain open and that will be 1 How to Find Real Salesmen or Positions as Such Behind Every Successful Concern Stand Salesmen If you want to keep trie dollars pouring into your strong box ?'ou must have real salesmen salesmen who can make an intel igent, tactful, and forceful presentation of your goods. To a busi ness house the difference between salesmen and mere"order-takers" or clerks is the difference between success and failure. If your salesmen are incompetent find prtduc'mz salesmen cheaply and quickly with our Want Ads. Or, if you are a real salesman or saleswoman and you want a fosition or a better place than you now have, you will find our ittle Want Ads splendid position finders. Scores of employers and hundreds of employees read and use our Want Ads daily and profit greatly by the habit Write your Want Ad like those below. Make it definite and to the point Then send it to us promptly. You will be pleased with the results. Learn to Use (Suggestion for You to Adopt) BALKftMKN WANTED Competent retail Clolhinf Ma legmen. We want experienced men of good appearance who know the talking points of men's clothing and who can present our merchandise attractively and convincingly to customers. Will pay good Mlary to capable men.- Write, girtnf full details of experience, etc., or rail. Aidreest POSITION WANTED By eperienrd retell tho aJefiman. Thoroughly underatamte selling point! shoes; knows leathers; competent to lit shoes correctly. Will handle your customers with tart and produce sales. Will learn your stock very ejulckly. Salary reasonable. Address: it The Want Ad Way',' ' The Republican's Want Ads go to over 30,000 readers. Get to these readers, through this investment. Phone 422 3 I HOW THEY BAT I White Sox. Mesa. j E. Collins, sb Nutt, 2b j j Weaver, ss I'ittmari, 31) Chappel, rf Brown, ss ! Fournier, lb " ' Fomeroy, cf I J. C. Collins, rf Williams, If 1 I Roth, ef Bond, li j Brenton, 3b. Barrett, 11) I Daley, c Sehall:. c Russell, p Morris, c j I Scott, p Cicotte, p I I Benz, P ' Faber. p I . A the post oflce. The garages will have an tneir extra cars m service to assist in handling- the crowds to and rrom the game and the stage lines will commence running extra cars direct to the grounds as early as ten o'clock in the forenoon. Manager Langowski has been one of the busiest of men for the past three days getting the park in readi ness and making arrangements for handling- the immense crowd that is expected. One of the most imnort- ant things that has been occupying his attention was sandpapering the diamond. He annonnced yester.iay that the lot is in better condition than ever before in its history and one of the fastest he has ever seen. It has required a good deal of money and not a little time to drag Jown the bumps and fill in the holes, but he is satisfied that this has been done until it will be even a surprise to the fans who visited the park when it was in the pink of condi tion. There is another feature that is that is meeting with general approval and that is the rearranged lineup. The fans are under the impression that it will mean a much closer score and will be tlie means of bringing much faster work from the visitors-. With Cicotte in "the box for Mesa there is the assurance that they will have one of the strongest pitchers in the American league. Ci cotte played with the Sox here last year and his twirling gave the local hitters considerable to talk about afterwards for some time. In Schalk the Mesa team will have one of the best catchers in the American league. While his record is not up to that of Daley, however, with the proper working of the jinks on the day of the game at Riverside, he may de monstrate his superiority. There Is another change in the Chicago lineup, official notice of which wa received yesterday and that is that Brenton would be here instead of . Brunswick for the third base position. AVhether high life of the past win ter will, interfere with the champion Braves will develop early in the sea son. New champions are always watched for the effects of prosperity. ! Y.W.C.A. Invites to : April -Fool Party I - Come and join the fun at the T. W. C. A. Thursday evening, April 1, an other of the clever evenings arranged by the social committee. If you are a member of the association come and join the jolly circle and do not wait for a formal invitation. Your member ship means that you are included and cordially welcome. The following proclamation has been posted in the reception hall where all who come may read. Fool! iake heed! Your presence we need To make complete our fool's retreat Bring your best fool tale so you can compete With the fools who come to this fool meet. The meaning of this fool thing implies The best fool yarn will win the prize." April 1st, 7:30 p. m., Y. W. C. A.. o HAPPINESS Happiness and unhappiness are ir rational, hey are outside of theoriz ing or philosophy. A trivial incident sends our spirits up or down. "Thinn ing backward" is how the Germans describe melancholia. The loneliness that is experienced in crowded places. and the yearning for days gone by or for far-off scenes creep unannounced into the heart. Real troubles do not kill the joy of living. Catastrophe and hardship challenge the soul to combat and there is a grim pleasure in meeting and grappling with adversity. The slumping of precious illusions, the chilling fogs of misunderstanding, jealousy, envy and self-pity pile up at times to obscure the vision. Il lusions which are our playthings and our reasons to be alive, no longer gleam and glisten. Dry reality sup plants the radiant ideal. Every, perspn has believed in his innermost mind that he had a mon opoly of sorrow and tribulation. "No one as oppressed as I walks this earth," complains the unspohisticat- ed wayfarer. Fatalists there be who argue that no one is happier than anyone else and that he who goes down to the depths of woe merely is paying for his ascents to the pin nacles of bliss. ' It has been discovered that defec tive circulation, lack of exercise, over eating' and foul air breed the blues. Their cure is in an active exercise of all the functions, in work and conviviality and sport out-doors. De troit News.- . o ONE MISTAKE f AMUSEMENTS 1 BUSHMAN Hi BAYHE FEATURE AT EMPRESS The patrons of the Empress will be given a special treat today and tomorrow, when two favorites, Fran cis X. Bushman and Beverly Bayne, will appear in "The Accounting." This feature is the sixth Essanay. complete prize mystery play, pro duced in conjunction, with the La dies World. This is a thrilling drama of love, and international in trigue, in which secret service of ficials of two nations fight a des perate battle for supremacy. This is a great story and has been real by" thousands of readers and ,when played with such a cast as this, is hard to beat. Double Feature Program at Lion Today a six reel program will be shown at the Lion which, includes two feature pictures. A Jwo reel Key stone special called "The Home breakers" is the 'headliner and fea tures Chester Conklin, who, sup ported by a splendid company of fun makers, furnishes two solid reels of laughter. These Keystone Specials come every two weeks at the Lion, the last one being "Fatty and Ma bel's Simple Life" which was a scream. An elaborately staged two reel drama by the Reliance players called "The Love Pirate,?' is a good production and Fay Tincher nlavs the lead, ably supported by Raoul Walsh "You have your father's eyes," de clared, grandma, looking earnestly . at the young girl. "Yes'm." "And .you have your mother's hair." "No: this is sister's hair," faltered the girl.- "And she said I could bor row it." St. Louis Tost-Pispatch. . Send her a pretty box of Donofrio's delicious crystallized Cactus Candy as your Easter gift We will prepay to any address a large box of our Donofrio's Genuine Cactus Candy for $1.00. Spe cial boxes of Donofrio's Chocolates for Easter, too. Special attention given to out-of-town orders. Easter Flowers Telephone 509 and plaoe your order now for Easter Lilies, Calla Lilies, Hyacinths, Tulips, Roses, Car nations or Sweet Peas. Your Easter Dessert will be most enjoyed if it's a Donofrio Ice Cream or Sherbet. Special creams or bricks packed to order. Easter Novelties Candy Easter Eggs at 25c a lb. and up, and at lc to $3.50 each. Easter "Bunnies," chickens, etc.; Nests, etc. Easter favors and toys. Donofrio's Telephone 509 for Prompt Delivery Ice Cream, Candy, Favors, Flowers ( ) .,ier---r.-.-7'c-r--... ' Wm J i vN$W and Elmer Clifton. Miss Tincher (riays the part of an adventuress. "Coals of Fire," an American drama of merit and a Thanliauser comedy, "The Dog Catcher's Bride," complete the program, which is fully up to the Lion standard and will please every observer. Jack Chanty at Lamara The business of prospecting and the mining industry that grows out of it has formed one of the most favored of all fields for romance in the wide range of American literature. There is so cloe a connection !etween American literature and the business of making, motion picture plays that one may be said to be but a part of the other. Cer tain it is that the modern business of making motion pictures in which a plot in involved is but a visualization of the stories of the day. This then is one of the charms of the picture "Jack Chan ty" now running at the Iamara thea ter. It is a story of the northwest mining country in which all the virile qualities of the American come to the lore. Max Figman takes the name part and he is materially assisted in mak ing the play a success by Miss Lolita Robinson, whose brunette beauty lends, itself well to the Indian maids part she plays. Jack Chanty will show again to day. Tomorrow Elaine will be at the Lamara in another Exploit, the sev enth. Coliseum Successes To the jingle of bones and tamhor ines, "Bob" McGreer's bunch of "joy producers" slammed out a safe hit with the Coliseum fans yesterday evening, when they staged a neat bit of minstrcly. The attendance at the Old Coliseum theater couldn't be bet ter and the old shack takes on the appearance of days of yore. This week's offering of "Minstrel Maids and Men" has had a splendid attend ance and it is to be regretted that this bill must close Wednesday eve ning to make room for the coming new bill of Thursday evening. At the Arizona William Farnum in a spectacular and impressive film version of Wil- json Barrett's sublime and immortal drama, "The Sign of the Cross," will be the feature extraordinary at the Arizona tonight. The play featuring the famous ac tor, is a product of the Famous Players. For many years the original play has fascinated the imagination and swayed the emotions of audiences throughout the civilized world. "The Sign of the Cross," derived from the j symbol which to hundreds of millions has borne so profound a significance, .teaches a lesson that is not easily forgotten by the spectator. Miss Scott her two chums are all sup plied with plenty of chance to create fun and the story is so full of good things that the audience is kept in one round after another of laughter. AMERICAN POTASH WILL DISPLACE THE GERMAN "Girls" New Record It did not take the theater fans long to find out the class of the offering this week at the Columbia and for tho first time in two -weeks the Tuesday house doubled he opening night. "Girls" is some of the best comedy that the local contingent has been granted he right to give the once over in many moons. It is a sparkling comedy filled with the brightest lines of anything Fitch ever gave to the stage and the cast just fits the company. Miss MacClean as the man hater and Miss Hammond and The New York Times of last Fri day announced the sale in that city of 10,000 tons of "American pot'ish" at a price equivaent to that paid i-i normal times for German potash salts. The sale, according to t'ie Times, was made by a Pacific Coast business man who has engaged with a small group of associates, in tho production of potash from seaweed, or kelp. Delivery of five cars is promised -within sixty days and tho Westerner told the Times thit processes for the "commercialization'' of kelp have been improved to the Jioint where success is assured. Tho seaweed is "harvested"' by a sub marine cutting device, with a canar ity of fifty tons per hour. He adds .that the fifty tons of kelp, when j "processed," yields five tons of fer tilizing material with a potash con tent of more than 20 per cent. The opening of the Panama Canal, it is explained, permits delivery of tho product on the Eastern seaboard at a fair profit to the producers. N'jiV Orleans Picayune. j o The family tree is an actual tiling in 'Japan. The tree is planted at the birth of the children and remains untouched until he marries. It is then cut down ' and made into furniture for the newly ' weds. . . OH IC AGO whit h 1E WELS WEDNESDAY,.-MARCH. 31 at RIVERSIDE-PARK, -PHOENIX Game called at 2:45 Sharp Gates open at 1:00 o'clock