The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 2, 1905, Page 2

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2 Medium Weight Underwear All Wool and worth $1.25 the ga ment, w < ! $1.50 the suit for ton w's sale A CLOTHING HOUSE Lio mt AMUSEMENTS Seattle™""" LP Manager vee 48, HOw? Both Pho | Last Three Nights and Bargain Matinee Saturday | | Of the Grea Novelty This Seas “PARSIFAL” Popular Prices 250, 50 s urday Matin . | Next Week, St ay M inee, The Ferriss Company in Grau stark. GRAN JOHN OPERA S=:'\'«" HOUSE Theater Both Phones, 65 ORT Me FRANK 5 ‘ompany tn the Great Five-Act War Drama, “THE SIEGE OF FORT FRAYNE.” nm the Stage—80 PAUL GILMORE “THE MUMMY AND THE HUMMING BIRD.” . Seats selling Pric Friday Thira Avenue Theater “The Most Popular Theater.” & Deew, Managera Tonight and All Week he Favorite Brandt-Baume Stock Company In Clyde Fitch's Beautiful Play, “LOVERS’ LANE.” Next week, Starting Su tnee—The Greatest of All Plays, “Que Vadis,” (By the same Company.) Matinee Prices Adults, . 10 $1.50 to 2B ay Mat Religious | a} nes 567. Evening Prices—20c, 30c, 40¢ an THEATER STARTHEATER Cor. First ave. and Madison; Formerly Alcazar Ten Thousand Regular Patrons Admission, Ie to Any Seat Meany and Anderson, Beaty and Price. Sadie Reynolds, Lieyd Spen @er, Richard Burton, Bunts F Mons. Satvino, the Bioscope. Re Served box seats, I5¢, Continuous performance 2.30 to 6:30 and 7:30 to {nternational Tug of War Tournament FAGLES’ HALL, Seventh and Pine. Eight Nations Rep- resented Feb. 27th, 28th, March 1st, ith and 6th. 10:30 every day Sea, Admission—<Gents, 50c. Ladies, 25: Greenbaum's Cloak and Suit House From the maker to the wearer. 410 SECOND AVE. Tel—Sunset, Main 3448. ART AND ECONOMY BLENDED in the KIMBALL SYSTEM OF PIANO MAKING. Art, in the popular and proper sense, means everything which we | Metinguish from nature. Art con- sists in doing, science consists in knowing. The KIMBALL PIANO factory contains a greater number Of expert workmen and a greater @mount of scientific plane know!- than any plano factory in the the finished product KIMBALL PIANOS —reprenents thy Very best of the piano maker's art as is fully evidenced by the heart indorsement given KIMBALL PI- ANOS by the world’s greatest mu- sictans. SYSTEM THAT SAVES YoU MONEY. ‘The Kimball system of plano Manufacturing and selling ts a per- fect blending of scienes, art and economy. It is a plan system whereby you get the best possible musical value at a minimum price. When you start out to buy a pi-| ano, a painting or piece of statuary, you net only want to know some- thing of the artistic and scientific bent of the producer, but you want to know the ability and facilities of the seller to make you the right | Investigate the D. 8. Johnston Co. | system of selling; you'll find it| aaves you a considerable sum of money in your purchase of either a Piano, Reed or Pipe Organ or Piano Player. D.S. JOHNSTON CO 903 SECOND AVENUE. Burks Building. The entire line sold at cost. BOO1.. AND SHOES. 912 Second Avenue. 104 FIRST AVE. SOUTH. Phones—Sunset, Pink 1751. Inde- pendent 1751. Free delivery. Mail orders prompt- ly filled and packed in plain boxe: RELIABLE TRANSFER | Baggage, Furniture, Storage Office and storage room, 1216 First avenue, Postoffice buliding. ed Sunset 902, independent, THE SEA Food For Sportocrats but 1 tn sald A LITTLE WHIRL AROUND THE BUSY CIRCUIT WITH A FEW " 1 needa pler drilling SHORT STOPS AT DIFFERENT STATIONS—ALL THE NEWS |" | : pra anygyemetr THAT'S WORTH WHILE IN THE MANY FIELDS OF SPORTS j Bver since he was about able t& toddie he has figured on the dia pond, but It was not until he wien HELP! HERES ANOTHER!) Pole grour at fall ' t} will not attempt to make the boys time the friends of the twirl one ¥ but will compel then If thowe pitchers k on invent | ae he has been practicing the new|te tee the mark, when t are at down the bateman, it be mol dees hie co! wr asked about NILED THE CANUCKS small wonder if they by the | nis WwW dincove Ames merely After the recent meet of the! an . t ache a k je, but f sll} championship Amateur Skating os amonds to th | that can be learned he really intends | sociation held in Montreal, a num ¥ poor bat }to have tt ne hin repertoire of | ber the New York bunch began i, were he to bie hin | fussy ones during the coming sea-| to 1g mud at the officers of the the farm, where he 1] son. association scrcss ¢ line. ‘They ng the ples and er «| stated that t feolals earn his food and ratment, without} GANZEL WITH DETROIT. Mid not act right in the matter and the anxiety of being compelled | From Oakland comes the report] were willing t nk at Cowl tact ontrive some means whereby he} that °C Ipa” Van Haltren has re-lin order that the Cana@lam ekat jay awipe baseballs, delivered from | ceived a letter from his old college | might win, The Canadian officials | the b of unfeeling pitchers.) chum and play Hh Gansel, | indignantly de (hie imputation which « booked to ¢ oll sorte Of) firet baseman of the w York culb, | and dectare there was not the ellght funny things before they reach the! in which It was stated that Gas eat excuse for the charges of bad | ave Griffith for the | faith, The New Yorkers whe head. Leon Ames, the big pitcher of the ed the ty say the statements of New York Giante—"Dear Leon"—| matter came up for] the unplaced skaters from New York] has invented one that has the “ptt” | consideration at the Amer uelare false nnd evidently uilted and all the other bunch of rk-| meeting in Chicago, the results of | from an attack of groweh. screwited” balls irretrievably ousted | the conclave were kept secret for | © the leafy confines of the tall and] the tt betng THIS 18 GOING BOME. unslivered. The latest is the “stop Farrell was not certatn then that “ t ent wet ball. This te one that leaves the! Griffith could «pa nnel, and the | t tat ming, Mich, Ole ‘trenuous arm of the mighty Leen! Detroit sb was about biting ¢ ke, Wis, made with the apeed of a lightning bolt | off big a chunk, The matter 104 feet. The fying leap nd just as the batter is about to! was then dropped and it looked as if t @o on record, howev * kill it, the funny thing b it was all eff. Now, howeve omes | Mongseth fell as he tanded. Among While the crowd will the letter to Van, and from the , those present { the tournament @ its breath, as a glimpae of the fer klea therein, it look» a®|is estimated that the aki rider. streak shoots toward the batter, lo! | th e first baseman id on competing wolng at the the sphere suddenly siows ” it in a Detre \ fort t » h ' The meet the batter who has swung with a| during th ming season. was held ah . + incline of ighty heave, unable to still his = 133 per cent, and while mg at thin! | momentum, whirls around ike a WILLIS HARD Jon |rate the men took thelr dying leap | Dervish dancer, while the pitcher Willie Keeler, who is to train the | through the air Ma h leo im high glee. Harvard baseball team in batting | went 279% feet in threl ff Claima to have made the! will have a hard Job ahead of him. | which ts the greatest di while practicing on the Nearly all college teams are weak | during the tournament E TRACK AND SPORTING PARADISE GREAT AUTO RAC THE PROPOSED SPORTSMEN’S PARADISE, If plans now considered are carried out, the Atlantic Coast Motor Speedway association will give Sportsmen an ideal place for automobile racing, golf, tennis, polo, fishing, hunting, automobile-boat rac- ing and, tn fact, sport of all kinda The association has 4,000 acres in New Jersey. near Harnegat bay, at its refusal. Upon 2,000 acres of this it proposes to construct « five- mile triangular automobile 1 track, 1.0 feet wide; @ two-mile automobile speedway, of circular form and a mile straight-a way, which will be part of the triangular course. Grand stands, club house and hotel accommodations will be provided. Two railways make the grounds accessible from New York and Philadelphia. In addi- ton to 2.000 acres devoted to track and field games, 2,000 acres will be devoted to a game preserve. William F. Howard, captured the 6 3-6 seconds. The hop, step and second and Iras third jump was captured by Dixon who! was played heavily at od made 26 feet 7 inches. The mile run was done In 5 min- | race handily Tuck Back ds bet ween | 10 and 20 to 1, and won the fourth Favorites had « Weather clear; utes 57 seconds, Vance crossing the tape a few seconds ahead of the | fast. Rearest opponent. As a result of last evening, Howard becomes the day of it. VICTORIA, B. C,, owner of the Lippy medal for the | Vance March 2 ver Recreation Park Liner Some offered for the | present year. The first of the|pany is being organized ber@® ip : r je three athletic com-| second trials will be held next connection with the new ests given by the Y. M.C. A.. with | autumn | league. The ca haa the conclusion of the meet, held in | cuneate tal f $500 8 "ae. veodl the gymnasium of the club, last nae & Mok it ie ae rope climb was won by Bushell in the belated introduction of thin re- | chase a block of land 300x380 night. Howard did not win in the} se single meet, but had the moat points VARSITY WON | few a three blocks of the ay to his credit for the three contesta pa Sue Games 6 Sell ane teen The events last night were clone, ‘ | NORTH YAKIMA, March 2 every point being fought for des | tedion" beakiotball team cf the aon Pee Gan oe cooper ot three |Yersity of Washington won the UNIONS PROTES meets were as follows: Howard, | tt this place last evening by a ———— £26 1-2; Vance, 604 6-6; Dixon,773 | Score of 10 to & ‘The match wae 1-2; Bushell, 748 5-6. | lose and. exciting from start” to |, TM «foposnd repeal of the ate Laat evening the events were hot-| finish. At the chose of tha fire: | *-hour law was denounced 8 ly contested, the points scored by | nait the score stood 4 to 3 in favor |"Ptc!al mteting of the Hdl the participants ranging in close | of the iutid Sons Dering the last | TT84e" assembly held Inet night order. * The resolution sneod sald in part _ howe j ; Five competitions constituted the heer } pas Cg Te at gs open | “We demand of representa - programme, consisting of the 120. | tors. Coach MacDonald a the | tives from King county tn the estate yard potato race, rope climb, hop ‘varsity team, sald the match wag | ¢@i#lature the full measure of pfo- step and jump and the mile run.| one of the hardest played by the | tection to which labor—organiaed ‘The first event was won by Vance, \e U” team this year. Jana unorganized—is justly entitled who finished in 24 3-6 seconds. The | a ee jat their hands, and we denounce | | Peal mensure at the behest of a con- te of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas > : : Bate of Om Sporting Briefs) tree comvine. armed with Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he every corruptive agency. We deny Hor partner of the firm of FJ Fs subsidized statements alleging “ae : SAN FRANCISCO, March 2.—An- | increased cost of public works as ps anias won the handicap from a | likely to ensue unless thin just law 7 | field of five yesterday, making ev repented being contrary to rh the nnot be cured by th ery post a waatog one. The only 1 experience and tn defiance une oO alls Catarrh Cure. | Upset wae in the second race, when | of many proven (llustrations in this Senn tutte ce Gallant Cassie ran away from her | city and elsewhere.” in my De- | field Weather clear; track fast es = goer, ‘ ~ oe The Capitet Hil Improvement AT Se -| LOS ANGELES, March 2 Bugle | club held a banquet at the Wash- nal tly on Horn won the fifth © over the !ington hotel last night, M. M Brooks course at Ascot yesterday “ r, (. W. Bandera, T. P. Reddle ye. € EY Toledo, 0. “but was promptly disqualified for | ana Dr. B. F. Munrc ndling the Sold by all Dr 4 eS tr Peete Pune for const). %Uling Invictus and Freesias. In- toasts, Miss Edna Loe sang a : victus was placed first, Freesias solo "LE STAR TRATED BILLIAL DRAW HOT Ct eee oe Oe ere gunstioes SSS ss os Strike the cue ball low, using care | not to draw back the cue, The red HM should be struck rather full y with fast enough force to re | turn the red ball to the corner CUTTS THE ~ FAVORITE | CRACK HARVARD FOOTBALL PLAYER PROBABLY WILL THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1905. 8 eee He Wo Chinese Medioine to Profit Sharing Sale Sale Makes Large Saving Gheod | Now On Housekeepers Early Great American Importing Tea Co. Our 100 Stores Help Us to Help You 908 SECOND AVENUE WIPIKE STREET SEATTLE ful € t ne. 7 talk with He Wo betore giving . YREE naullatiog 210% WASHINOTON STRERP SEATTLE. ’ Spring Time !s Comin genaoceancncoapaonngnan * Remember, to carry full Mneof Paints, 0 Varnishes and * Specialist in Disea: Brushes you wifl find we are in | "I ng : of Men and Woman : ERNST BROS. Both Phones 1168. 606 FIKE STRERT . Of the disease vanish CONTRACTED DIBEAGES CURED IN A WeeK Consultation tree Thousand Per DOW T BE DEOLIVED BY FALSE STATEMENTS | { And allow any one t oriment with your Kiba Wh AE EXCLUBIVE DR. SEVERANCE PRACT hay e@ the Inrgest and most BCIENTIFIC | Rowe 9 and 6 oa n the Pacific Northwest Over Twenty 710 First Ave ATT“ wisn queces SPOOR COACH AT UNIVERSITY } "Who is to be our next coach tT” | is the question that is taking up more time in athletic circles out | at the university than any other There are many candidates for the! porition, and good ones, too, but It looks as though Otfver F. Cutts, of Hary would be the man app Jed. The crimson man has many jstrong candidates lined up against | jhim, but his name ts that can not be lightly overlooked One of the main features, h jis causing considerable opposition | }to him t# that it will cost the stu | dent body $200 more for the crack | Harvard coach than for the others Many of the students are of the opinion that in apite of the some jwhat depreciated state of the stu dent finances, Cutts is well worth the extra sum. It is very likely the decision will be postponed by the committees until next Monday PLANS FOR AThELETIC MEET The plans for the annual cym- nastic exhibition to be given by the jathietes of the Y. M. C. A. in the Grand opera house, on April 4, have been completed. The show this year Will exceed any of the entertain- ments given by the club in the past. Aa elaborate program has been ar: ranged by Profs. Dowbitt and Lee, and the boys have responded en- thustastically to the appeal of the professors for hard work in the Symuasium since practice for the erent was announced. The program will consist of wand drilling by the respective classes, followed by Indian club work. Par allel bar exhibitions will be a feat ure of the seniors’ work. Flying bar and horse work will also con- stitute features of the evening's en tertainment. DECLARED A DRAW The match between the Scots and the Americans, in the tug of war loontests at Hagles’ hall, last night | was declared a draw. For 25 min | utes Both side hauled away at each | end of the line, and when Referee Riplinger finally fired his pistol, | announcing that the time limit wa’ | up, the American team had but two | feet the best of the bargain. The | match was the most exciting wit neased since the contests have been in progress, and the crowd bowled themseives hoarse as their favor-| ftes tugged and strained to baul| thelr opponents over the floor “Hoot mon, pull awa’ noo,” time and again yelled the captain of the| Highlanders, and each time the Scots responded gallantly The Americana lHkewise united their ef. forta in a combined attempt te overcome the sturdy Scots, but to no} avall The Swedes again won the match with the ...sh in less than one sec ond after they received the signal to haul away The Germans the Norwegians while Denmark into camp in were defeated by in 7% seconds, took the Canadians % minutes Captain Ed. Spranger, of the| German team, and Captain P. 8 Grade, of the Danish, aggregation had a tug of war during one of the intermissions, which was won by }the German. contests will be held tonight, but tomorrow evening the men will go to it again, and on | jmext Monday night the final |matches will be fought for the! champtonship. INCREDIBLE BRUTALITY. It would have been Incredible bru tality if Chas. F. Lemberber, of N. ¥., had not done the best he could for his suffering son. My boy.” he says, fearful gash over his eye, ok len's Arnt quickly healed it « for burns and at@o. Guy's Syracuse, 80 T applied Be which 1 his eye. t Only ir re EVERSOLE OPTICAL COMPANY, 16 Second ave, New York Block enconesoneeens $$. Of free prescriptions, free treatment, free electric belt etc. Unreliable medical concerns have sprung up all over the country during the last few years, and their purpose seems to be to im- pose upon the sick and af. flicted with catch-penny schemes and misleading free offers. Then there are many med- ical concerns who claim they cure any and all dig eases the human flesh is heir to, whether they are known to be incurable or not. The successful physician of to day is not the one who knows a little about every ailment, but the one who knows all about certain ones. It is very evident that a doctor who dabbles in all branches of medicine and surgery cannot become an expert in the treatment of one certain class of dis eases. Consequently, a sick or afflicted person cannot have much faith or confi dence in the ability of such a doctor as he can in one who devotes all his time and centers all his forces on a certain specialty. I am the acknowledged leading spe- cialist in the realizing this, decided to concentrate all talents, energies and seat on the treatment and cure of dis- eases of men, and The Expert Specialist | AM THE ONLY SPECIALIST In the Northwest Who Treats Nervous and Other Diseases of Men Only There are thousands of men whose minds are weak and impaired and whose bodies are unsound and diseased. They suffer from the follies and excesses of youth and experience a weakness of their mental and physical powers. They are weak, nervous, tired, languid, despondent and absent-minded, have weak, aching back, palpitation of the apricious appetite, frightful dreams, a constant fear of impending trouble which them for work, business, study or marriage. Others are suffering from diseases. ARE YOU ONE OF THESE MEN? Are you staggering under & burden of a secret weakness which is a slow but sure drain on your strength and vite ity? Does the tremor of weakness and disease shake your body and appal your mind, and do you look back upon your past life with a sigh of remorse? Are you in your present state fit for anything? Can anybody rely on you? Cam you rely on yourself? Is your body almost wrecked and your brain in a whirl? It is ternble to be in this condition, but it is worse to allow it to continue and become aggravated, for it will then fill your whole future with misery and indescribable woe just as certainly a8 night follows day, and it is of the greatest importance to yourself and yours that you get out of this condition of weakness and disease. It is also equally important that you com sult a doctor who makes a specialty of the disease from which you suffer. PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF MEN The Largest, the Oldest Esteblished, the Best Equipped and Most Rellable Medical institute In the West It will cost you no more to take treatment of an expert specialist than to place self under the doubtful ability of a mediocre. It must, therefore, be plain to you is absolutely necessary for your future welfare and happiness that you cast your modesty aside and place your case in the hands of a skillful and reliable specialist; Wa) will quickly and permanently restore you to what nature intended—a healthy, vigorous man, with physical and vital powers complete, fitted in every way to enter ceura and successfully into the strenuous battle of life. I wish to have a private heart heart talk or correspondence with men of all ages, occupations and conditions in life, are weak, nervous, broken down, discouraged, or who suffer from any secret disease Of weakness. Do not put off any longer from day to day and from week to week a matter such vital importance, but do something now. It will be none too soon Consultation and Examination Free MY TREATMENT at the HOME is a GREAT SUCC . Ome personal visit is preferred, but the fact that you are out of town and cannot call need not deprive you my If you cannot call, write and receive full particulars, mode of treat prices, terms, etc. These will be mailed you free of cost. No medicine sent unless of dered. fat services. CALL OR WRITE State Medical Institute Longest Established—Authorized by the State. Corner Washington and Second Ave., Entrance 202 Second Ave. South, Seattle, Wash Office Hours, 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Daily Sundays, ro a. m, to r p.m

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