A B ase Ball C anard Have You (Continued from Page S) up, pulled off his eyeglasses, throw his stoglo Into the grounds nml shrieked thus: "Yah, you big hick. You poor simp. You bone, you. Whadtla you know about baserunnlng? Huh? Who told you you was a ohainpeen? Doncha know you can't get but just so far oft'n foist? An' doncha know that when you 're that far off if you lean your body Just the least bit toward second, he's got yuh? Why, you dope, you, what 's yer vaudyvlllo act tho Slcepin' llcauty? Who put morphine In yer coffee? Why doncha get a sofa If yuh wanta take a nap? Yah, you chainpeen!" And so on. He kept It up until the next play was started and then sank back into his seat, quivering and almost exhausted. 1 tupped him on tho shoulder. Just as a matter of psycho-sociology. I Inquired, "What business are you in?" He glared at mo defiantly and said: "1 am a jeweler." Tho next man got a base on balls. The next man made a short hit. Then the side went out In two-threo order. Tho Irate diamond man almost had a lit. "Yah," ho yelled so that half the grandstand could hoar him, "If Shafor hail only stood still on that bag just as I told him to, we 'd have scored a run and won the game." Which was true, as It turned out afterward. "If he'd only stuck his spike in tho bag; If he 'd only got a pot of glue; If he'da set down on the dem sack and chewed his gum any thing, anything." Shafer happening to trot by at this moment, the whole thing began over again. "Yah, you. Call yourself a baserunner. You could n't boat a blind crlpplo with the wind behind your back. Why, a turtle is a Hans Colemlno compared to you. Hun? You could n't run an ad in a noospaper. Yah, you chain peen!" rpHIS1 as the reader knows, is one of tho joys, tho national joys, of at tending the national game. While Gcorgo was tinkering tho watches (or else had let them go hang and was sitting somewhere else in the audience) this little wedding-ring merchant was giving export advice to his hirelings of the afternoon. And on all sides of him sat we oth ers, gormandizing tho ozone and breathing It forth full of Inside In formation for Manager McGraw. Besides this vocal hullabaloo while tho game Is going on, there Is an other branch to the passion. I refer to tho national pastime of dropping tho local manager a post card, thus: "Why don't you can that shrimp that hides behind second every time a ball comes his way? Are you a baseball manager or are you a char itable organization for the support of imbeciles and cripples?" This sort is always signed, "A Fan." Or thus: "Keep your eye on Poko Swank, now playing first for Little Rock. This feller Is HIg Lis material. Ho can play better ball right now than that half-witted behemoth you got holding down tho sack." Signed, "Hooter." To return to tho llttlo Jeweler for a moment. Ills tirado against Shafer brought out another typically American trait the use of a sort of sarcastic ex aggerated humor, what Kipling called our "acrid Asiatic mirth." Wo have developed a purely Amerlpan brand of wit as exemplified by tho word-smiths who report tho game. For Instance: "Merklo pulled ono of his usual bones. Ho hoisted his marble think tank into tho parabola of ono of Old Left Soupbone's slippery elm spray sprigs and was promptly beaned on his pseudo-cerebellum. Hut it Is al most Impossible to fracture Fred In the spot whero Silas put tho hay." To all good Americans this Is sim ple and full of fun. To any ono elso It Is about as Intelligible ns a para graph from Henry James read loud by a lady with a Southern accent, a cold, and a tendency to pause and gasp after each comma. Another point, also in passing, which any self-respecting chronicler should set down for tho perusal of. at least, future generations If not this one, is that baseball Is a terrible demoralizer. Wo need only consider tho awful lies which are told by fans, either to their business associates or to their wives, In order to attend a game. Think of the young lives which are started wrong; consider the ancient grandmother fib. As the twig is bent, so the future business man Is inclined. Nowadays young America is committing perjury by tho bucketful. Worse than that. They are becoming adepts at bur glary, invasion and trespass. At a recent game I saw a ten year old lad being led out of tho grounds by a special policeman. Tho lad was be ing held by the ear while the special cop poured words of wisdom and ad vice Into said orifice. Ho said: "You are over sixteen years old," which the culprit was not "and you can bo Indicted for the offense you have committed. You can be sent to JAIL." (Tears.) "Think of your poor father and mother dragged Into court because of this." (.More tears from the ten year old.) "Think of the heavy fine they would have to pay. Now this Is the last time 1 will let you go; the next time I catch you I will see to It that the full penalty of tho law Is visited upon you." (Pro longed sobbing.) After tho boy had left, 1 learned that he and twenty odd others had taken a two-by-four and pried off some Iron bars sot in concrete in a basement window of the grandstand. Damage, about ninety dollars. Inci dentally I am pained to relate that all the other boys got good seats In the stand and tho policeman was un able to find these base malefactors. Could Infant Infamy go further? An swer, no. I remember in my younger days another young man who leaned a board against a fence In Kansas City and climbed up it on his hands and knees to see the old K. C. Illues wallop Boston. Tills was in the days when Jlminie Manning never cousld ered it a good afternoon's work un less he stole home. This vicious lad not only wore out his stockings In the attempt but, there being a barbed wire strip around the top of the fence, ho utterly collandered n line new pair of pants for which his poor and yet honest parents had paid three dollars. All to steal his way into a game which he could have rightfully attended by paying the small sum of twenty-five cents. IN conclusion I would like to say 1 that I know an American citizen, forty-flvo years old, who has been a newspaper man, a magazine editor and a successful man of affairs In general. Ho seems to be of sound mind and quite normal. Yet he has never seen a baseball gamo In his life and ho boasts of it. It is almost Impossible to believe that there is such a poor benighted simpleton on earth. Yet I know him and he lives. Just think of him not a man, but a crustacean. Not a live palpitant American, but a lob ster. A dull drone who known not the wild joy of whooping loudly over a fellow man's skilful accomplish ment. A business sot, a routine runt, a bleak, obtuse thing with a granito nose to a sandstone grindstone. Not for him tho clear, snappy air of a clear day at tho ball park. Not for him tho eye-rellevlng green of tho well-kept sod. Not for him tho now stir of "nerve and tho quickening of his heart's blood. A groping thing of papers and decimal points beneath an electric bulb; a mere thick hunk of unagttatcd clay. I leavo tho reader to strlko the happy medium. How Long Kept Th How often h.ivo you pared it, just to keep it clown ? How many old time, foolish treat ments have you applied to it? Yet tho corn re mains. During all this time a million corns monthly havo been taken out by Blue-jay. at Corn? Folks apply this little plaster, and the p.im stops' instantly. In 4N hours they remove the plaster, and tho iorn lifts out. No pain, no soreness, no discom fort whatever. And no more doctoring of that com. Think of it a million corns monthly are ended In this way while von, in other ways perhaps, still treat tho samo old corns. Why not try tho new way on ono corn ? A In tho picture It tho soft H A-11 wax. It loosens tho i urn. B stops tho puln unit krrps tho wax from Hptonillni;. C wrnps n rou ml tho too. It Is nnrmwisl to ho i-omfurtiililc. D Is rubber adhcslvo to fasten t ho plaster on. Blue -jay Corn Plasters Sold by Druggiits 15c and 25c per packages Samplo Mulled I'roo. Also IUuejuj ltunimi Plasters. (287) Bauer & Black, Chicago and New York, Maker of Surgical Dreitingi, etc. EQJIB ML ML MPMf Drills Satisfying Hi jueiioious At Fountains or in Dottles at Grocers' Order a case and keep a couple on ice. Nothing better. 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WiH DugdaU Co., 17 Dviil IWf , WaahlntonD.C A Collection of Artists' Proofs Is the next thing- to owning the original drawing All my proofs nro tin llrst printing from tin originals This motitli 'h nlTor is "A Study in Clinmml." by C.'lmilcs Daini (iiltsoii, anil '(iatln'riut; Maidi'ti Hluslit's." by Howard Chandler Christy, Mm most lKiimlar artists of American llrtion and ; literature. i "A Stttdr i Cbircoal" Br Cbarlei Dt Cibun Start Your Collection Now Knrli ise i; eh (r'nln or MHmpi to rnfi iotliikr' nml piii l. -iiitl fin tlir-r lieuii- tlful iirtiiii" tn 1 1 ill l oilKlniil oin hle X 14 Inrlies iirlnti'il on IiIl'Ii llnl-.li ennmi'l liaiier. A Beiutiful Dtn Pic lure for Any Home Mnnv oMiit ii'inti iIiii'Miiii- l fninoif. Bllll Alllllt'Sfi F. A. BARR, 1400 Ketner Building, Chicijo, III. J "G.lherlnsM.iden Dluihct" Howard Chandler Chritly How ilitra mi uihrrtlHi-r lmlil )imr Iruilr" II) kHIhe tiiliir.