« oc on Fr i mee Taave a fine chance of landing the flag. ~ BOSTONS HAVE FIND IN A CUBAN CATCHER Ca : ; Stallings Coaching Gonzalez. The illustration shows Manager Stallings of the Boston “Braves” coach- f ¥ng Gonzalez, the Cuban catcher, at their: training camp at Athens, Ga. "Stallings believes he has a find in the young Cuban ball player. WHY PITCHERS CANNOT SLUG i%eteran Jim McGuire Says It's Be- cause Heavy Hitters Dodge the Position of Twirler. “He must be a pitcher; he can’t hit ffhe ball.” How often one hears that sronclusion by the fans and it raises tthe question: Why are pitchers al- ¥nost always poor hitters? Jim McGuire, Tiger scout, says that ene of the reasons is that when base- ball men find out that they can’t be #&ood hitters they develop themselves ¥into pitchers. And vice versa, when they find that they can’t be pitchers, they make a stab at developing them- sselves into hitters and become out- | fielders. | ~ Veach, for instance, the new Tiger | e>utfielder and slugger from Indian-| mpolis, tried two years ago to be a | mitcher. He found, however, that he | wwas going to be so valuable as a hit- | ter that he decided to give up the | ¥aurling stunt, at which he could be | «nly mediocre, and give his attention | %o the development of his hitting. The result has been that he has hit | Ibimself into the big league with ex- | e=llent prospects of staying there. Veach certainly has an arm that ¥s great, all right. He has shown it in his pegs. Of course, after using it @as he has for throwing from the out- #eld, he has tossed away his chances wf becoming a pitcher again. Cashion, the big 220-pound pitcher wwith the Nationals, is a man whom ¢Clark Griffith tried to make into an «<>utfielder. Cashion started in to hit ms if he meant to be among those in | €he .300 class, but he failed to make #&ood and Griffith returned him to the gegular pitching’ staff. J. MILLER IS GOOD ON FIRST Strengthened Pirates in Weak Spot | and Fans Look for Another Pen- | nant in Smoky City. When Jack Miller finally signed his econtract the Pittsburgh fans were made happy. This means that the wosition of first base on the Pirate #eam will be well looked after this Wear. Miller was a hold-out for some time, but the differences between thé INew Jersey lad and Manager Fred € Clarke were adjusted in a manner that pleased all concerned. First ¥rase has been a weak spot on the {E2irate line-up for a number of years Jack Miller. snd has knocked the team out of wore than one pennant, in the esti- ymation of Smoky City critics. Jack Miller was shifted from sec- ond to first last season in the hope of pringging up the weakness and the rmove was a capital one. Miller made good from the start. The Pirates are looking for a pen- rant this year and it is conceded hy s=ood’ baseball judges that they will | them as the | the National experts pick team in | he " amd a good sticker. WANTS PARK SIGNS CHANGED Morris Rath, Clever Second Baseman for White Sox, Thinks Could Im- prove 1913 Batting Average. Morris Rath, regular second base- man of the White Sox and leading fielding sacker in the American’ league, is ambitious to win more glory on the baseball diamond. He wants to boost his batting average above the .300 mark. In order to achieve this distinction Rath wants the signs at Comiskey park changed. He thinks the signboard caused him to suffer a slump in his batting last season when- ever he played at Comiskey park. Rath is ambitious to become the best all around second baseman in the American league, a distinction that has been given Eddie Collins of the Philadelphia Athletics for several seasons. “I don't know whether the center field signs at Comiskey park are changed, but if they will run that green streak all the way across I will get more base hits. Our left hand hitters certainly love those signs,” | said Rath. Rath was the best fielding second baseman in the American league in 1912. He had the edge on Eddie Col- -lins, the leading fielding star of 1912. It was the belief of several critics that |:Rath excelled Collins all the season in the fielding end of the game. Rath had thirty-seven more assists than the fleet little second sacker of the Ath- ‘letics. In fielding ground balls and going back after pop flies and possi- ble Texas leaguers Rath has no peer | in the major leagues, thinks Manager Callahan. Besides being the best fielder at his position in his circuit, Rath is one of the best waiters at bat in the big leagues. There is one thing in which ‘Rath ought to show improvement in 1913, and that is in his base stealing. He has the speed to steal fifty bases a season. He pilfered only thirty sacks in 1912. It is also the ambition of Rath to win the checker championship of the White Sox. Like Christy Mathewson, Rath is a good checker player. The championship will be won in an elim- ination series. Rath, Doc White and Frank Lange are the leading players on the club. ' Newspaper scribes will also be admitted to the tournment. AROUND 7% BASES “Doc” Johnston has been doing .great work at the initial sack for the Naps, and has cinched the job. Nap Rucker, the star hurler of the Superbas, picks the Pirates to land the flag this season, the Giants sec- ond and the Cubs third. Jim McGuire, the veteran Tiger coach and scout, says that there were few players in the olden days who wanted to become fielders. ‘Every youngster wanted to be a pitcher or catcher,” says Jim. Lee Magee of the Cardinals is said to be the fastest man on the team. They say he has enough speed to fur- nish several athletes. A baseball scribe says the Boston Braves are against woman’s suffrage and equal rights, because they are afraid women will take their jobs. McGraw has announced that play- ers on his team sipping of the foam- ing hops will be fined $25. This is the first season the Giant pilot has taken a stand of this sort. Schwenk, a young southpaw with the Browns, is being called a second Joe McGinnity because he pitches both overhand and underhand. “Bermuda forever,” says Manager Chance. The peerless leader believes he has found the fountain of youth in the island training camp. Pitcher Bill Steele of the St. Louis Cardinals communed; with Smoky Joe Wood during the ‘winter and says he has picked up several of Wood's tricks in pitching. EL CELERY AS DUCK FOOD Winter Buds and Root Stocks Are Relished Best. Plant Is Wholly Submerged With Long, Flexible, Ribbon-Like Leaves of Light Translucent Green— Flowers Are Peculiar. (By W. L. M’ATEE.) The names wild celery and canvas- back duck have been closely associat- ed in the annals of American sport. To a certain extent this association is justified, since the canvas back ob- tains about one-fourth of its food from this plant—a greater proportion than any other duck. However, the asser- tion that the flavor of the canvasback is superior to that of any other duck and that it depends on a diet of wild celery is not proved, to say the least. "* The scaups or bluebills and the red- head also are very fond of wild cel- ery, and are fully as capable of get- ting the delicious buds as the canvas- back. Several other ducks get more or less of this food, the writer finding that even the scoters on a northern lake in fall lived almost exclusively on it for a time. All parts of the plant are eaten by ducks but the tender winter buds and root stocks are rel- ished best. Wild celery buds can usu- Wild Celery. ally be obtained by the diving ducks, such as the bluebills, redheads, can- vasback and scoters. The non-diving species, as the mallard, black duck, baldpate and the geese get an occa- sional bud, but more often they feed upon the leaves. Wild celery is a wholly submerged plant with long, flexible, ribhon-like leaves of light translucent green and of practically the same width (any- where from one-fourth to three- fourths of an inch, from root to tip, This plant may be distinguished from the eelgrass, which lives in brackish or salt water, by the fact that its leaves grow in bundles from the root stock, while those of eelgrass arise singly and alternate on opposite sides of the stem. The flowers of wild celery are pecu- liar. The staminate flowers attached at the base of the plants shed pollen, which floats on the surface of the war ter and fertilizes the pistillate flower. The latter is attached to a long slen- der, round stem, which contracts in- to a spiral, drawing the flower under the water after fertilization. The seed pod into which the pollenized flower develops is straight or curved. a little slenderer than a common lead pencil and from 3 to 6 inches long. It contains embedded in a clear jelly, small dark seeds, in number about 50 to the inch. No such pod is borne by any other fresh water plant. GUINEAS ARE HARD TO RAISE Young Birds Must Be Watched Care- fully Until Past Tender Age—Of Very Wild Nature. Guinea hens are among the hardest of all birds to breed, chiefly because the young guinea is so extremely ten- der. They are also of a very wild nature, and when one of them is lost from the hen it may be counted as lost. It is advisable to keep the young guineas shut up for a few days after they are hatched and feed them on bread crumbs, coarse corn meal and occasionally a hard-boiled egg, ground fine and mixed with the bread crumbs. After they leave the hen, if the days are warm and bright, they are allowed to hunt bugs and worms and require little feeding. After they are feath- | ered out they need little care, as they are able to shift for themselves until the winter cuts off their supply of food. In winter they must have a shelter and be fed the same as other poultry, ,but must be kept shut in when there is snow on the ground, as they will fly into the tops of trees or on roofs of buildings, and refuse to come down. Latest Idea in Anchors. An anchor for lifeboats has been in- vented that is hollow and filled with nil, which will still the waves after it has heen thrown overboard. Died While Decorating Grave. A painfully sad occurrence took place recently in the Belfast Cty cemetery, when an aged man named Charles Kildea, who was engaged in decorating a grave, suddenly became Hugh High, the youngster whom the i Tigers obtained from the Connecticut | State league last year, is pretty sure will stick. He is unusually fast RC ill, fell to the ground, and expired in a few moments. Two Points of View. Young men think old men fools, and ld men know young men to be so. F. Metcalf. . i RT » wer CURES PIMPLES EASILY. simple Remedy that Claars Skin Quickly of all Eruptions. For several weeks past S. E. Thor- ley has done a big business in selling Hokara, the skin healer that has won so many friends in Meyersdale. It has been found to heal not only all minor skin trouble like pimples, blackheads, acne, herpes, scaly scalp, complexion blemishes, itching feet, piles, ete., but also the worst ulcers or even chronic eczema and salt rheum. There has yet to be found any form of wound or disease affecting the skin or mucous mem- brane that Hokara does not help, and its action is so quick that those who try it are simply delighted with it right from the start. In spite of its unusual curative powers, the price is trifiing. To con- vince every one of its merits S. E. Thorley will sell a liberal jar for 25c. And remember that if you do not think it does what it claims, you get your money back. You cer- tainly can, afford to try it on this plan. ad FIVE MEN ON B. & O."IN- JURED AT HOBLITZELL While attempting to make a quick stop of a handcar on which they were riding down the grade at Hob- litzell, on the Connellsville division of the Baltimore & Ohio, railroad Tuesday morning, the car was de- railed and five of the section gang, Damico Datelona, Peter Marlucei, Alphonso Marlucco Niccola Delgross and Digento Delsico were injured. One of them is thought to be inter- nally injured. { enemas. Eczema spreads rapidly; itching almost c:1ves you mad. For quick relief, Dcun’s Ointment is well rec- ommend:. . 50c cents at all stores. — le Fur Good Roads. The date of the big State good Harrisburg in the interest of the pro- posed amendment to the constitution to permit the Commonwealth to issue bonds for highway building, has been changed from September 17 to 18. This is because the 17th is the day after the primary elections, and it would have been inconvenient for many men interested in good roads to get to Harrisburg so soon after the voting of the 16th. One of the most impoptant features of the big gathering will be the or- ganization of county committees to take charge of the subsequent cam- paign for the bond amendment in their various counties. The effort will be to constitute these county committees so as to represent the many elements of citizenship that are favorable to the construction of high- ways on a systematic plan. Doctors, lawyers, preachers, merchants, me- chanics. men of all walks of life, will be enrolled and given an opportunity in their home communities to lend a hand in this popular movement to put the great State of Pennsylvania in a position to finance its most important public improvement practically and economicuily. While the idea of the big conven- tion was conceived in the minds of officers of the Pennsylvania Motor Federation and the active work of preparing for it has been in charge of Mr. Joseph H. Weeks, Chairman of the Good Roads Committee of the Federation, and while it is expected that large numbers of automobilists will come to Harrisburg to participate in the meet, there is every indication that it will not be in any sense dis- tinctively an automobile convention, but will be representatiye of the best thought of the people who have come to regard good roads as essential to the development of a great State. The convention will include delega~- tions from organized labor, who rec- ognize the the extent to which better roads will contribute to cheaper living and the general welfare of the work- ing classes, while many of the big industrial corporations also will be represented because of the apprecia- tion of their management of the fact that improved highways mean busi- ness prosperity. Chairman Weeks is not yet ready to announce the list of speakers, but assurance is given that it will include some of the best known men in the State, as well as several good roads authorities of national repute. The convention will be held in the Hall of the House of Representatives in the State Capitol, which will probably be far too small to hold the crowds. Governor Tener . will welcome the good roads enthusiasts to Harrisburg. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Tr SY LZ a Signature of roads convention that is to be held in | For Your Baby. 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JUSTICE OFTHE PEACE. m Waverly Oil Works Co. CONFLUENCE, PA. PITTSBURGH, PA. U Ought to Use Deeds, Mortages, Agreements and all Leg. Papers promptly executed Vv. -6ma7m BUHL & GATESMAN, Distiilars of Pure Rye, Wheat, Ma and Gin. Distilling up-to-date, MEYERSDALE, Pa. Nov.i15-tf. oy idney Pills- What They Wi't Do for Veg They will. ‘ your backacks strengthen * = kidneys, eos recturinar_. gularities, bulls ap the woia ou* tissues, and eliminate the excess uric ack that causes rheumatism.* Pre The Commercial Press Handles It vent Bright's Discase and Dia bates, and resicie health ary strength. Refuses: substitutas FOLE | 4 ao FOR BACKACHE [U: F. B. THOMAS. Cn PRO( The long Wilson-Ur dragging despite the of the le early tern in sight. ters Lave game. Fi parent th ‘feating th called ‘¢ who have vidual pre gaurd ag passag. chorus Of Most of believe Ww however their pred turn wha cratic bh vantage, from a I be to cea permit tk because i sooner ib the quick be the re: But it i # the most 5 Senators ly believ duce the have 0 8 matter of ditions ¢ such a re is univer accurate deniably ly estab] in it have clared th even gre are cont Moreover aged mo mer to d ity howl he bas probabili any mab these dir: The we id in V only one was oce the part against come ta: These r3 the bill ly high The yesu holding « which ai for re bill ~ wit] rates of The new of 1 pe $3,000, w which th additions exceedin $50,000; part of and not additions come ex ceeding tional on ceeding $250,000 part of a and not additions $500,000. The D has als submitte kansas, on futu a stipula refunded al del This is i ive gan been sc prowers It ma; tand pa gnition bcies of ounded eeking heir tar Dnger e ch rate The d: eople boan’s R p. 2