EL PASO HERALD 24 '. "Saturday, July 15, 1911. What Positions Furnish 1 If ''"' Golfers, Notice '' We have golf paint, also paint remover that cleans quickly paint from off of golf balls. Tuttle Paint Glass Co. BeU Phone 206. Auto Phone 1206 Most B aseball Managers? Bismark Herring QRr per can . ... . . . wJu Chiles Jalapenos, made in old Mexico 35c Franco American Braised Beef, per can 35c Franco. American Yeal and Green Peas; per can 40c franco Chicken Curry, per can 40c Franco Hungarian Goulash, .per can 20c Franco Chicken ' Saute, per can 30c Franco American Partridge, per can 30c Franco American Grouse, per can 30c Franco American Wild Duck, per can 30c Franco American Soupes, all kinds, . .15c, 25c, 40c Clicquot Club Ginger Ale This is the finest Ginger. Ale made in this country. The quality of which is equal to any imported Ales at a much higher price. Per Bottle, 20c. Per Dozen $2.00. Green Yalley Apples, per pound 5c Eating Apples, 4 pounds for 25c- Wild Goose Plums for Jelly, basket 60c Large California Apricots, basket 65c Phone 151. 210-212 Brother Ed BY MILES OVERHOIT. MT BROTHER ED Is deaf and dumb, but, goodness! he is bright; "why, he can figure any sum when he is feeling right. And quick of thought! "Why, honestly, he thinks before he speaks, and often times he thinks ahead for half a dozen weeks. One night while roaming through the woods a grisly grizzly bear chased brother Ed until toe lost some 20 SPECIAL SALE Molasses Creams with. Fine Cream Filling 20c per lb. SATURDAY ONLY ' CONFECTIONERY COMPAJTI, C S. PICKRELL. 3CGK- : ': I I'i uaii KUItTfUMT0Tar7Bt RftiJTH AFRICAN fUi TERBAtt - f; TJfc-WAfirtLL 1,47. t; t ?TUr.6aN 11 1 t rmffli iifiwr - ' 312 South E! Paso Street Will "Sfifa. ? HIIIMIW'I Will 11H I II II III ""J'r -: TftKHflBlWC . m ? .---: Z: BeU 608 & 629 DRUGGISTS A. E. RYAK fc CO. OPEN ALL Rail 111 BL GROCERIES W0LESAXE Auto 1271 Mail Orders Given Prompt and Special Attention. CLUTORD BR0Sv 307-309 E. Overland St. HACK and "Will be -up right away. LONGWELL'S TRANSFER. 116 to 120 San Francisco St Careful Men. ? BAGGAGE and "We're there in just a minute." Storage and Packing by careful men at right price, BELL 1054. POM'S TRANSFER, K AUTO 1966 Texas St. Auto 1151. pounds of hair. What could he do? He couldn't shout and scare the bear away, and as the night was early, well, he couldn't wait for day. "A noise, a shout." he softly thought, C,A'V' -g&fe. "My kingdom for a shout." But that was all the good it tdid; he couldn't get it out And then a thought oc curred to him that knocked him off his pins, and over logs and rocks he fell and loudly barked his shins! Of course the barking scared the bear, which turned his tail and fled, which also helps to turn this tale "which helped my brother Ed. 80RD0N HAT FACTORY FORMERLY WITH JOHH B. STETSON. Hats cleaned and blocked in fac tory finish. Paaamas cleaned by Cuban process. Xo acids used. 105 Texas St. Maif TJs Your Hats. r vKJ Xv X 7 -v-azRfi JUST RECEIVED The largest line of Porch, Lawn, and Camp Furniture -everiiiv El Paso. ' . - ana get prices, we sen.ior less. Our water bags ' Save you 10c a day. THE OLD RELIABLE El Paso Tent & Awning Go, v Phones 2044 Tell These People What You Want. They Respond Prompt! Auto 1068 212 SAN ANTONIO ST. NIGHT. EL PASO TRUNK FACTORY Bell Trunks, Bags and Leather Goods Auto 1054 Made, Repaired and Exchanged 1S66 We Store Goods. Opp. Postoffice, across Plaza. BAGGAGE Reasonable Prices Bell 1 Auto 1001 Auto 1966 Farnsworth Figures It Out That Shortstop and First Base Have the Call. By TV. S. Fnrnsworth. New York, N. Y., July 15. What po sition on the diamond produces the most ba'seball managers. A srlance over the list of big league generals chnnro that the shnrtstOD and first base positions furnish baseball with a majority of the national pastime s ci-dlrectprs-in-chlef. .Another peep re veals tbe .'fact, that there is little to choose, so far as managerial ability Is concerned, between the men that have advanced from the playing firmament to the leadership .stage. Of the 16 major league managers, four had gained renown s first base men; four had made their mark as shortstops; three were formerly, or are, catchers; and one each has srraau ated from right field, center field, left field, tiliird base and pitcher. There is missing in the managerial list only a second baseman. TriT- Ttnfmfn Manncett. The first basemen who are now man- agers are: Frank- Chance. Chicago; Fred Tenney, Boston; Hal Chase. New York Americans, and George" Stbvall, I Cleveland. The shortstop delegation Includes Hughey Jennings, Detroit; Hugh Duffy, Chicago Americans; Rhod erlck Wallace, St. Louis Americans, and William Dahlen, Brooklyn. The caicners wno nave maae tncir marKS j as big league leaders are: -Connie I Mack, Philadelphia Americans; Charley Dooin, Philadelphia Nationals, and Roger Bresnahan. St. Louis. As these three positions have given baseball most of the managers, it would not be amiss to enter into a discussion on the respective merits of 1 the men upon whom hinges the suc j cess of baseball. Chance in Firat Place. Taking the first base division: Of the array Frank Chance Is the one -who stands out most conspicuously. "Husk" has proved beyond peradven ture that he Is one of the greatest managers that has ever been associ ated with the game. Chance has per- j formed the unprecedented feat of pi- loting a team to the National league championship three years In succession. 1 Ever since Chance has handled the Cubs his team has always been in the thick of the fray. This year is no excep tion, and the Cubs are the ones all the other teams figure they must beat In order to carry off the National gon- T ! O I ! ! O NATIONAL LEAGUE. John ilcGraw, New York.... 3b Frank Chance, Chicago lb Charley Dooin, Philadelphia c Roger BresnahanT St. Lrouls c Fred Clarke, Pittsburg, If Clarke Griffith, Cincinnati p "William Dahlen, Brooklyn.. ss Fred Tenney Boston lb A3IERICAN"' LEAGUE, Connie I&ack, Philadelphia. ...c Hughey Jennings, Detroit.., .ss Hal Chase. New York. lb Hugh Duffy, Chicago ss Patsy .Donovan, Boston rf George Sto vail, Cleveland lb James McAleer, "Washington.. cf Roderick "Wallace, St Louis.. ss Total First base, four; short stop, iour; catcher, threes right field, one; center field , one; left field, one; third base, one; pitcher, one. r k o . . . - vi Indestructible HOSIERY i 6 Pairs , Guaranteed For .6 Months 25c Per Pair fifo "' " T aW- IF -mk WSmlm "TWtr" 'TIM x HaaaaK 8BE&&S$m?W5&k ItMftl . - - "Ik. jR-i;.;v( J " acaaaa - - .cv --jusjoo afgagr- orMtQuwim " i x- . . ? .- -: 'a. .: - j. m r :-- sssay. - iar.vrc-.yuk. u& ,4 ." i. r? ,i ?:its 1.1 ji'S-W, aBSHSEBSSSSJGIIB&iMMKE flHiKXifl StWarBBBflF JHSH - I liiiPyisvSaHI SMMjBSal if I MsiBS- SPat J f rnlMmP' TTWirTifr FrfTiElllBl The live men who are leading the m ain pennant contenders of 1911. Above 1 xJm'pire Finneran and left fielder .la are Frank Chance, manager of the Ch lcago Cubs (one the left) and Johnny 1 see, of the Phillies, had a row In Phil ' McGra-rc who guides the destinies of t he New York Giants. Below, from left adelphia July 10, and as a result Fin ,0 risht. are Red Booh,. flBhtis skipper of the PhHlIes: HuShey Jennings, af & Jj "es and the prancing boss or tne .Detroit jungie oana, ana uounie jiav;n., uuici uui. shrewd chief of the world's champion a thletics. J " j falon. There Is every indication that I Chance is through as a player. Re- ; neated thumpings on the" head by pitched halls' have been .the .ciuse of Cub leader having ' dizzy spells, the This condition has seriously Impaired his playing ability, but It has hardly affected his thinking capabilities. Chance figures to direct his team from" the bench hereafter. Chase Comes Next. Hal Chase, manager of the local American league aggregation, follows Chance Insofar as s'uccess Is con cerned. Hal has had his gritty team fighting it out with the leaders all the time, despite repeated disruptions in his ' team on account of injuries and Illness. The Yankees have put up a game figbt. Chase, in tbe time he has been at the .-"helm, ,has sbowifc himself ! fn h nossess'ed of rtfiich Wsebkll acu- men. ' George Stovall and Fred Tenney have 3et to show. For a while after Stovall ""as entrusted with the man agerial task of the Naps after Mc Guire resigned, it appeared that he would make good. But since then the Clevelands .have been going poorly and it looks as if Stovall will have to stick at the first base job in order to earn his livelihood at baseball. Tenney has been a rank failure and his displacement Is looked for next season. It is not Fred's fault that the Rustlers do not win more games. Ten ney knows as much baseball as any one in the game, but It Is entirely a different matter to Inject that know- ledge Into players who cannot grasp it. i The Shortstop Graduates. Of the shortstop graduates, two are successes, while the other brace have yet to display anything worthy-of men tion. Hughey Jennings is well known. The fiery manager of the Tigers has copped the American league bunting many times and his team is In the struggle this year as much as ever. Hugh Duffy has made an excellent showing" with his bunch of Chicago "comebacks." Bill Dahlen and Bobby "Wallace have been sad failures in managing their teams. It is alleged that both have been tampered with in the 'direction of their mlnicns. They have tried and failed, although Dahlen will probably hang on another season. Wallace is booked for his old position at shortstop The catching department has been responsible for three of the baseball geniuses of the season. Connie Mack, Charley Dooin ahd Roger Bresnahan have all made good. Mack and Dooin have their Quaker collections showing the way in botb leagues, and bid fair to have them around the topmost rung till the end of the season. Mack is almost certain to have his "White Ele phants occupying the highest notch when the season closes. As for the Phillies, it is a question if the pitch ers especially Alexander and Moore can hold out. Dooin has been working this pair unusually hard and, if the veteran-and crude youngster can with stand the pace, then Sleeptown will have its representatives fighting it out for the -world's championship In Oc tober. Brcdnahnn'n Revelntlon. Bresnaban and his Cardinals have been a revelation thus far tnls season. Roger can boast of only one or two stars outside of himself; yet he has directed his team into the first divis ion. Patsy Donovan and Jimmy McAleer, i two of the old school, both fielders In -Ti?y Ttvh -!- - ?-TltrA TrVi" Iyi me,noVi, t Ttntv. nr-ft. MaMPrl among the wise heads of baseball, yet j they 'cannot get the material to be contender. AIcAleer uias declared tnat he will resign after this season, al though his contract has another year to run. Fred Clark, of the Pittsburg Pirates, one of the finest left fielders In the game,' has been a great manager In the many years he has handled the Pittsburg team. Clark is at present whanging the ball for way over .300, and is giving Hans "Wagner a close Argument for the batting supremacy of the National league. Third base has offered but one man ager to baseball, and he is acknow- ledged one of the'shrewdest that ever directed a. team. John McGraw, man- ager or the uiants, is tne one tnat has done honor to that position. Mc Graw's baseball knowledge has gone a long way toward giving New York successful teams. Clark Griffith, of the Cincinnati Reds, was once a pitcher. While with the Yankees at the beginning of his mana gerial career, Griffith had his hire lings up in front. "With Cincinnati this year, Griffith has been in the ruck all the time and promises to remain there. Buy It now. Now Is the time to buy a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, 'Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It Is -almost certain to be needed, before the sum- j mer is. over. This remedy has no su perior. For sale by- all dealers. America's Champion Polo Team In Bronze This bronze group, by Hubert Hazeltine, is now oij exhibition at the Salon des Artistes Francais in New York. It represents, from left to right, Devereaux Milburn, Harry Payne Whitney, Lawrence Waterbury and Monte Waterbury, the American team which won the International polo championship from the British, D. & M. BASEBALL GOODS Save a full line of . G-LOVES, BALLS, BATS, MASKS, &c Also a nice assortment of TEHrfS GOODS Shelton-Payne Arms Company aderistas, Teneo muchas vidrios en mi almacen de Cuidad Juarez 7 pnedo repocer todos los vidrios quebrados immediatemente y coa mucha comodidad. Mi direcion es Telefono 532. . L. W. HOFFECK2S, - 214 K Stanton St. El Paso. Texas. OUR PLAN TROVES MORE SUCCESSFUL THAX TTE AT FIRST EXPECTED. Many Are Securing EDISOX PHONOGRAPHS OR VICTOR TAXKING 2IACHIXES. On Our LiberaJ $1.00 a Week Offer GREAT ENTERTAINERS GET ONE. W.G. WALZCO. 103 Kl Paso Street Catalog os Gossip of Games Here and On Other Fields of Sport (By Ted had started for the bench, "when he suddenly turned and rushed toward the umpire. As he approached. Fin reran removed his mask, and just then I Ma see swung on him -with his fist, cut- ting a deep gash in the umpire's cheek. ! Finneran was rushed to the hospital. aere stitches were taken In the cut -""ew iuw iac -i. """" ...-. names that do not go with men; Fin neran claims that Magee deliberately attacked him and that he intends to have the plaver set on the bench; pres ident Fogel,f the Phillies, says that Finneran has been trying to get a fight all season and now he has been accommodated and that he will back Magee in the affair; president Dynch says that this sort of thing must stop and is making an investigation. Lynch does nob say whether he will stop a player from fighting an umpire or stop Finneran from roasting the playu-ers.- Seems to be a mixup. It would seem now that a fight will be arranged between Ad "Wolgast and Knockout Brown. Wolgast demanded that Brown put up forfeit money be fore he would agree to fight him. Morgan, Brown's manager, has posted $1000 as a forfeit and Is waiting for Wolgast to make the next move. Mor gan has also put up $10,000 that he wants to wager that Brown will knock Wolgast out. Burleson, the pitcher for Mobile, In the Southern league, recently secured from the backwoods, holds all records for strikeouts In organised baseball. He averaged 12 to the game in 12 games with Johnson Citj' and In his first two games with Mobile fanned 26 12 is his first game and 14 in the next. No wonder the big league teams are mak ing offers for the new man. ' "Atencion" Application. Mooring Although the Tale-Harvard athletes lost to the Oxford-Cambridge track and Held team In the meet recently, there is one satisfaction left, the man who defeated the American representa tives throughout was also an American. (?. E. Putnam, of Kansas, who is at tending college In England. Harry Cassidy, the right gardener of the Denver Western league teamr holds the record for consecutive games played In class A basebalL He Is now round ing out his fifth year with the Den ver club and has played nearly 800 consecutive games without a. miss. Philadelphia seems to De an easy mark for Detroit. The Athletics have one excuse, however, and tKat is the loss of Eddie Collins. He was the scin tillating star of the team and. his ab sence makes a hcle that is hard for them to fill at "this time. The fight fans of New York are try ing to arrange a match between Jira Flynn and Carl Morris, "the white man's hope." Flynn received a tele gram in Pueblo. Colo., from Morris's manager and left at once for New York. Carl Flick, an old El Paso player, who has been playing this season as. second base -for Boise, Idaho, in the Union association, has been ordered by the Detroit Americans to report at once. With Adair out of the game from an accident, the White Sox are somewhat crippled. Rokahr plays hard ball, but he is a better shortstop than third baseman and the absence of Tommy will hurt the Populars somewhat Charles W. Evans, jr., the American western open golf champion, captured the French amateur golf title in Ver sailles. France,' July S, by defeating J. G. Anderson, of West Newton, Mass.