OCR Text |
Show n THE BEE The Hunt lilt. On the in Town to get these Bivalves served in the Most Palatable way is at THE ROYAL CAFE, 252 South Main St. The Best place Delci-iou- s H. D. SABINE sin. west culled Hole Guarantees his customers the Best Fit, Imported Goods and GRAND OPENING THS Workmanship possible to be obtained anywhere,,- at. the very - - i CAFS W R. ENGSTROM, Prop. 111S. MAIN STREET Newly Furnished. Finely Arranged. Best Cafe in the City. t TABLE TALK. If the New Year in its practical lowest prices. Mr. Sabinee repis utation stands second to none as sense influenced at all by the magazines of the day, Table a high class cutter, having cut for Talk promises to do a large over twenty years for the finest share towards making it a happy The January issue has one. New 'York trade. among its many attractive articles the following: In Bermuda with 49 V. , SECOND SOUTH. Theodora, Old Linens Wash A Handful of Spices, Whitest, A Bit of Cuban Receipes, Correct Measures. Plausible Reform, and Califor A great many THE wonder why the nia Figs by Isabel B. Winslow. schol DRESSMAKFBs friend teachers andStand-rd The trs f the tested recipes and menus Garment Cutting school are so which are accompanied by direc.successful in getting perfect fit on tions for the economical method every form without 'changing a of carrying them out, must appeal line. This can be easily accounted strongly to every busy housewife. tor. the Standard s the only A sample copy will be sent free to world hat is allowed to any of our readers sending their use he Victor measure. This lit- name and address to Table Talk tle invention in itself, is a perfect Publishing Co., Philadelphia, Pa. vo ider, and every . sys-em-ln.- the i ailor and dressmaker who ha? een it declares it true j be theof only node getting correctmeasure. It s entirely different from all of the M THE NEW MEASURE. Wonder of the Nineteenth Century. Its Jut Another Fad. If you see a woman with something like a gold safety pin shining at the nape of her neck in her hair, dont tell her about it or try to remove it. It didnt get caught there by accident, but was deliberately put there to fasten up the short stray curls. This is not a pretty fashion. styles With it you can detect a moment in where there are any changes to be made, as it brings out eyery outline f the human lUrch Canoe for tlie Orient. orm, and therea fore jou can cut Bangor manufacturers are sending garment to fit a de- canoes of birch and canvas to Palesformed person just eas easily as tine, Japan, India and China.. One forth most perrecently sent to India was to the order fect form. mens-rement- s. pow-wo- llrtllUut Third brilJames Thoma Williams, th liant third, bakenjan secured by the Pittsburg Club from Kansas City at the close of last season, was born In St. Louis Dec. 20, 1876. lie learned to play ball In Denver and secured bis first engagement In professional base tall with the Pueblo Club of the Colorado State League in 1893. He was a member of the Pueblo Club, Lcadvllle, w full credit for being a scientific player. A successful hunter must not only be an expert batter, but he must be a fast runner and a brainy player. He must be able to instantaneously judge when a pitcher is delivering the right kind of a ball to be bunted, and just how much muscular power is required to intercept the sphere in its headlong flight in order to drop in the small TORTOK1 49 W3si Sicond bunt" discussion, President Ban Johuson of the Western League wrote several years ago as follows. It is Just as true today as it was In ISO i : The bunt hit has caused about as much argument In baseball as any one feature connected with that prince of outdoor sports. The controversy has raged so fiercely that the league magnates are going to hold a over it in the spring, and decide whether it shall remain or be ignomlniousiy turned out. The bunt hit, properly used, is one of the It scientific pleasuic3 of the game. to Is to binelall what strategy is war, a bunt make and the player who can and get away with it Is not only entitled to a base hit, but should have never-endin- g A of a British officer, and the cost of Endorced by all the Leading Tailors and transportation was more than $75. A Modistes Wherever introduced. canoe just ordered is intended for a St S. Main it. 328 Examine Call and trip up the river Jordan. area of safety, within the triangle bounded by first, third and home plate. A player, able to exercise the judgJ. T. WILLIAMS. ment and caution that a successful Col., and Albuquerque, N. M., teams player roust, can really be called a In 1896. In 1S97 he secured an enscientific ball player. Any dub, with with the St. Joe Club of the practice, can hit the ball out, but it gagement and his batting takes genius to bunt and. get away Western Association, soon attracted general atwith it. Some lovers of the game de- and fielding His principal achievement in clare that the batter should line It tention. In 1897 was four hit out and make it lively, throw his the batting line three home runs, In a ga weight on the bat and send the ball including His, in, that whizzing along the ground. Tueysay-tha- t jiihpOila.led to hitting his being called is batting. Perhaps it is; but isnt ganlzation Home Run Williams. His batting a successful bunt one of the prettiest record in 121 games that season was plays of the game? There is a man on .288, and his fielding percentage at first base. A batter comes up who can 118 in games .863. Manager bunt a ball, and generally makes it shortstop tried him at third base as a safe. He faces the pitcher, who de- Manning forlorn hope, and his wonderful work sires to know whether it is to be a in that difficult position made him a base hit or a bunt or an out. Then befixture and resulted in his release begins a beautiful contest. The wary Club, ing purchased by the pitcher bends all his energies toward He ranked third amongPittsburg Western the keeping them up and over. The bat- League batters of 1898, with a percenter stands expectant and alert, and the 139 .343 in of games, fielded .880 instant he sees a line ball coming out tage 126 games as a third in baseman. goes his bat, the ball drops, rolls a lit- Williams was an imsuperb playing tle ways, and when the play Is ended portant factor in Ills teams winning the batter is safe on first and tho run- the Western League'pennant in 1898. ner is anchored at second. The pitcher and third basemhmjDf the opposing Public Interested in an lifcc lilcytle. team say a few thingsinitch up their Considerable interest rhas been cretrousers and. lay for the next fellow, ated in eastern Wisconsin by the in-who lines out a safe hit, ambles down enter of an ice bicycle who has been to first, everybody knowing that he making trials of his runner-shovereno to is safe, chance being given hicle on the' Milwaukee river and the an not But him. tire instant, Jakes about Oconomowoc. There is during until the runner reaches first, is the apparently nothing new about, the ininterest relieved, when a man bunts a vention, however, which consists in ball. There is always a chance that substituting for the usual rear wheel the fielder 'will he able to handle the of a bicycle a wheel having twelvice ball in time, and the crowd is on the dogs attached to the steel rim and tiptoe of excitement until the man fastening a runner in a steel frame 'at beats the ball to the bag. Base hits each side of this driving wheel. are beautiful to look upon, but bunting sharp runner is also clamped to the rim Is the star point, when viewed from of the front wheel, which must, of the scientific standard of baseball. course, be made stationary, and steer' ing is effected with the usual handleIlls Independence. What a bad cold you have, Bene- bars. V d dict! Juvenile Ecstasy. dicto was got Dickey happy should the when family pui tating anyway. their winter flannels on. What occasioned his joy? Did you put yours on? We had a picnic an our ice cream No thats it. I had them on, and melted, so we were forced to eat it as when she got so arbitrary I went and soon as we got out in the woods ' Detroit Free Press. took them oft. Puck. Yes; my mother-in-la- w one-yggt- , 't . Sla |