The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 4, 1912, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PENING SMOKER DRAWS FAIR CROWD A fatr crowd of flatic fans turned out to the opening boxing amoker j given by the Elevator at the Labor night, and five bouts were staged tween political speeches by candidates for of | tea, Several of the bouts were ax- olting, and gave entire satisfaction to the crowd, although a mistake | was made in ever presenting such an affair as that between Jack Thornton and Juck Wekan, the lat- ter a cripple, It took some time to | get the bad taste from the mouths, Sof the fans. Steve Reynoldt and Carl Bergo, ight heavyweights, went four rounda to a draw in the main event. Reynolds was lucky to get that de © gong saved Bergo tn the second, but he came back | strong, and had Reynolds all but fout In the two succeeding rounds, | Willie Vietro was given a close de jelsion over Billy Mahoney, after | both boys mixed it well, and Stanley | Richards got what was coming to him in the decision Weaver. shown im the event between Toi my Clark and Charley Givens than any other bout of the evening. | These boys went four fast and clever rounds to a draw Jack MeDavitt gave general sat- jafaction as referee, as kopt the boxers from clinching as much w /0 | 25 Down $15 Per Month buys a fine new Sroom bunga tow, on elegant level lot 40x128, close to car; elty water, tole phone, close to school, 18 min utes from Pioneer Square acd the closest high-class residence section to the new Terminals. We will take you out on the street car or fn an auto which ever you prefer. See us at once as they are going fast. Geo. H. White 407 Oriental Bik. Phone Main 2209 $30 ars. 9 172 TRACIE ton. 905 1-2 Third Avenue Temple, boxing than usual His decisions were just and popular. ; RITCHIE TAKES RE | SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 4.——With his hand in @ plaster cast, Willie Ritehie, whose wrist was injured tn. bis fourround bout with Ad Wot Theatre full ef the best of USED FURNITURE You never saw euch sight [bis brother. NORTHWESTERN LEAQUD Athletic ¥ BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 o’Clock p.m. } TACOMA AT SHATTLE Admission 2c and 00 Yeater Ca’ LOWEST FARES EAST VIA THE “Milwaukee” ROM ALL POINTS IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWES Boston . woes «-$110,00 | Philadelphia ... «we $108.50 91.50 | Pittsburg . 72.50 | St. Louis . 60.00 | St. Paul .. 105.00 | Washington ... . 108.50 | Winnipeg ... . 60.00 AND MANY OTHER POINTS THROUGHOUT THE EAST. TICKETS WILL BE ON SALE September 4, 6, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 30. All tickets good for return until October 31, 1912. Liberal stopover privileges and choice of diverse routes are of- TWO SOLID THROUGH TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN Seattle and Chicago “THE OLYMPIAN”—The Finest and Most Popular Train of the Day for Eastern Travel. Leaves Seattle dally at 10:15 a. m. and carries equipment of the standard, consisting of luxurious lounge observation car, with spacious ladies’ parlor in which afternoon tea {a served, club room for the m library, writing room, smoking and buffet compart- ments. » Market reports and press dispatches, periodicals, barber, bath and tailor conveniences, Standard drawing-room and compartment sleeping , also tourist sleeping car. Dining car service of the “Milwaukee's” well established high standard. All sleeping cars are equipped with adjustable full window screens. All cars cleaned daily by the vacuum process. “COLUMBIAN”—Another good train, leaves Seattle daily at 7:15 Dp. @., carrying stondard and tourist sleeping cars. Por additional information regarding fares, routes, service and reservations, @all on or address A. P. CHAPMAN, JR., J.-L. CRISWELL, Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept. City Ticket Agent. Second and Cherry Street, Geattic. THE NEW LINE 18 THE SHORT LINE, 60.00 TO YOUR FUTURE— “Here's to your future, your present and past, May each new day be happier than the last.” The Seattle brew of such purity and whole- someness, and of such fine flavor that it has friends unnumbered. If you enjoy good beer, by all means try Old German Lager and learn the keen delight that awaits you, Delivered to all parts of the city in pints or quarts. Sold by all fam- iy Mquor stores or telephone direct —Bidney 16, “The Independent Brewing Uo. SEATTLE. WASHINGTON SC ; yo re GIANTS WIN. NARROW GAP AGAIN Tho fever heat that ts marking the ¢ over Billy|the finish of the pensant fight in| while More boxing class WAS/the Northweatern League rose sev | ahead eral degrees yesterday afternoon | subway occupants are giving when the Giants took @ 10 game from the Tigers, and when the lead- ing Indians were shut out by the Victoria Bees, Aa a reauit Seattle ia | score, ft was some game. behind Spo-| Waa at his best, and every time he half will Tecetyed the ball from Thompacn Vancouver also won from/ the Tigers on the bags would hug possible, and had more real, open|Pportiand, placing them but one| them until Bert returned the pilt now but eleven point kane, which a game and even up game behind the Giants, and giving the latter a hot fight on both ends to overcome the Indian lead and to | Pl keep the Champs from overcoming the Giant lead. Thompson pitched yesterday for the first time since he bad joined the Nupop” ranks, and while he had [an held a secret gaat, will be compelled to lay off|his usual curves and spted, the| third to force Whaling out at third training for several weeks. Hoe left) Tigers landed frequently. The only | 08 Shaw's sacrifice. here today for Chico, Cal, to visit/trouble was thelr binglen were not|let Chick in on the conspiracy mixed with the luck that marked those the Giants made off Belford. Thompran gave but two passes, while Helford walked seven men and three of them figured in the run-getting. Tacoma seored tn the second and again in the third before the Gt * were able to settle down to ee, bat in the iast of the third not retired unti. twelve men had feced Belford. The combt- nation of seven safo swate and seven Giant runs. i , did not blow up, aad the Ti jgers played consistently and well with the luck againat them. fog and hard work, landing fre jquentiy and scoring In each of the [last three innings, but being unable to overcome the Giant lead Netghbors got two real hits beat owt a bunt, and Stadilie | Chick clouted out home: Whating jhind tt, and bis two bingles and a homer, together with his steady i pecking earned him warm applause. Leslie Mann bit every time up, em cept w he was walked, and thee of the Giant rugs were charged to his bingles. | The same teams will meet at 3 | this afternoon, and ladies will be ad- [mitted free. With the series get- ting to the Intensely exetting period od with @ closer finish than is to | be found im organized baseball clse- where in the country, it ts safe to jeay that the crowds will daily in | crease from now on, ‘The official score Whaling, © | Tromprn, pw 5 } Totate cone |. Tecoma Staditie, tt M Nill (@ Jackson; NM | Chick to Jansen. OUT INDIANS SPOKANE, Sept. 4—At no stage of yesterday's struggle did the In- Idians have a look In, and they were wnable to solve the mystery of Smith's offerings and were shutout by the visiting Bees, 4 to 0. Noyes pitched for eight innings and was ;relieved by Kraft he ninth after Victoria had made four runs, and while they nit Kraft, the ball did not le the Infield, Smith had things bis own way from start to finish, Beore by innings: Bpokane oo es... eeeo Vietoria 2001 COLTS AGAIN GO DOWN TO DEFEAT PORTLAND, Sept. 4.—Not a Colt player reached third base in the gam esterday with the Vancouver 8, Gervais holding the Port- land men down to four hits. Hast- ley pitched a splendid sgame until the sixth Inning, when the visitors landed on bim hard, and by bunch. ing their hits chased three runa across the pan, the only scores of the afternoon. feore by Innings: NATIONAL He ~ 5 0 Pittaburg 2-1 Cinctnnatt 7, 8, Loule Philadelphia 6, Brooktyn 4 AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington 4, Philadelphia. 2 ch Be York-Hoston gama postponed; wat arounds COAST LEA Los Angelon 6, ae ae coemeliy AND| three ambles to first resulted im | times at bat and 4 hits for Loa, Belford, bow) walked twee, *¥only Giants fatling to clout yent finished the game with # good show. | on st _ was 4 star at the bat as well as be | the Tiger left garden. Ten has re| ¢| 20 game | San THE STAR—WEDNESVAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1912. Use a Little More Tact With Yo )) DIVING BOXER BREAKS NECK { NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—Buf- * i fering from a broken neck, sustained while diving into damaica bay, Mace Jaffe, a ie dying in COMMENT FRE PRESS BOX BY FRED HENRY Northwest pennant rai really getting warm, Spokane He was training for a fight at the time of his Injury. of Vancouver, seeeeeeee leaders a run for thelr money. Although not Indicated by the WILL MEET TODAY CALGARY, Alberta, Sept. 4-—All in in readinows for the groatest 16- | round boxing bout ever held tn Can- jada, when Billy Allen of Ottawa land Joe Bayley of Victoria will meet for the lightweight honors of the Dominion this morning at the Whaling caught Holdermar off third on a throw to Shaw, bat Um ire Moran, falling to gee the play, called Holderman safe, Then Ste dille bit, scoring Holdte, | scheduled for 11:30 a.m. Poth boys are well within The wise ones are inying oven | money that Bayley will win ty jot 10 rounds, “Hunky” tapped one down the third} en base line, aud hoth Chick ond Bol- Fo sugges ford went after tt. Belford grabbed! courtier, the 200 pound Standard the pellot and turned to heave It to] po rniture slabeter, la bunches, the third. “Nobody was there, and°alli non Orchard Cubs dropped a re the puyners wile oem turn battle to the furniture mon by PE, a 74 score, It was plainly a cane 1 was a case of letting Belford) of too much avoirdupols. A streak take bis medicine, Lynch didn’t) of lightning alongside of a Cour have anybody to warm up. tier delivery would look sbout as pm |active as Reindeo Bf, the mara lthoner, Twelve Orchards couldn't leven locate the pill, Mitohell of |the Standards hit four times in five times up. One swat went four sacks Mike Lynch, They forgot to BREF TRUST » offerings of Lesiie Mann hit 1,000 per cent yesterday. The box score shows 6 He Thompson and Raymond were the NOnTHW EAT L Both Chick and Stadille pickled! the pellet over the boards. Whaling also got a homer. m Btaditie succerds Ten Million ii ceived pretty treatment fro the Tiger management, being up able to got bis release & week Ago when he had a chance to plok up Vancouver. M With the assistance of Nill, Um-|toss big brush ball to beal the In- pire Moran succeeded in removing | dians an object which lodged in hig left optic. After that he ompired jon will be admitted free again It's fascinating music out at Oug’s Megaphore Miller announces defeat of either Spokane or Miller, on there occa sions, always polishes up bis allvery voice and «picls the joyful sews with a triumphant tone, ve ame fil My idea of nothing at alt—The satisfaction the public gets in watching some boob like Charlie Miller of San Francisco, whose only claim to fistic honors fe that be weighs more than a tenth of a long ton and has stopped three or four bigger boobs and has-beens around Francisco try to fight with even a third-rater like Jim Fiyon. Now let this motorman go back where they got him and stay there. got bis two bells to et ter, retirement, The majority of the dopesters picked Rivers to beat Mandot in the Labor day battle at Los Angelos, and were fooled—myself with the rest. Mandot had it all over the Mexican, and the latter is whin- ing or pungliing up a lot of usefess alibis, It is now the season for an- ir crop of stalls to be harvested in the Wolgast neighborhood, as so-called champion will probably hesitate to meet a man who put ft over Rivers, wh himself couldn't. If Wolgast sidesteps a bout with Mandot on Turkey day, he will call down more contempt on bis bead than rests there now—and that's aplenty. oeree Managers of Star league teams are referred to a notice in another column regarding the disposition of the pennants and cup offered tn The Star league. Get the data required in to me as soon as possible, so we can clean up on the league for the season and start something new. eevee Hunters returning from the woods say that deer are more pientiful than they have been in a numberof seasoné. This is due to the vig- flance of the game wardens, who are trying to see to it that some ven- ison-hog does not try to kill more than the bag limit. Hunters used to kill buffaloes whenever they happened to want a powder horn, and the result is that there are not 10,000 buffaloes alivo,in the United States today, and they are carefully protected. Don't be a party to the slaughter of deer in the same way, Just because you are out where den is likely to catch you at it. oe eee DO YOU KNOW THAT. The first amateur championship balkiine billiard game for the championship of the Pacific coast was played at the Waldorf cafe, San Francisco, in July and August of 1902? The game was won by J. J. Roggan, who heat Frank Pecchart, the favorite, by one point in tourna- ment proper, and beat him by 44 in playing off. ee ee Every game counts now, and while the Giants piayed like a bunch of sand-lotters Monday, the game goes into the sheaf of victories and it helped bridge the gap betweey the Giants and the Indians. Raymond's men should make a good cleatup this week. They are already throw- ing a seare tuto thé Spokane bunch, and right now is the time to win the pennant, ee ee 1 printed a story, the other day, about how hard It le to interview Jack Johnson, The peculiar thing about it is that any one who didn’t positively have to see him would make the effort ore e McLoughlin, May Sutton. Johnstone, Bundy and the other nit players raise terrible racquets. They have copped all the tennis titles in the country, Don't shoot-—he's doing the best he can. « we o-. From Dayton, 0., comes*the report of the stellar work of one “Cy” Young, a recruit in the semi-pro, ranks of that city. The papers say that Cy was formerly a big league hurler, and that his great first base work is Attracting attention of managers now. Yet, Pet. It's the samo old Cy you have been reading @hout for the past 40 years. ov ee ‘Tesreau, the Giant hurler, Is styled the “Ozark bear catcher” by the New York fans, Walt until h@ stacks up against the Cubs again and seo if he lives up to his title. | . e-. damp tidht{now, but if you are going hunting it’s ber the precautions to build your campfire in a safe place, seo that it's out He leaving it, to put out your pipe care fully and not to throw cigarette cigar butts away in the brush, light- ed, We have b free from st fires this summer, and it’s a good ni NNTP now Calgary arena. The bout ts) the 183 pounds.| Mr aybe they figure it's necessary to emer cers HIGH SCHOOLS NAME COACHES The appointment of football coaches for Broadway, Queen Anne and Lincoln have been made. Wit jliam M. Smith, principal of the Crookston, Minn, high school last year, lands the job with Broadway. | Smith had charge of the athletics and under bim the Crookston base ball and football teams won the | championship | Minnesota, Crookston tp a school of 1,600 students. Cook will assist Smith. BE. F. Wella will be the Lincoln jeoweh. He ts a former Dartmouth ‘and University of Washington man. | He played with Dartmouth and two years ago got on the University of Washington team. An injury caused him to be out of the game. high “pul at Queen Anne, He haa been as. jalstant coach at that school for the | past three years. WALLA WALLA GE FLAG WALLA WALLA, Sept, 4-—-A fi- nancial failure, the 1912 season of the Western Tristate League, ciosed yesterday. Walla Walla won the pennant. Boise finished second, Pen- \dieton third and La Grande siayed A Western smokers ing advantages of duced to the West success. grow. discrimination. You get as long a cigarette, but you Made with of Northwestern | W. A. Hamilton te the new charge | Be Repea { | € r Saturday Night's gram to Be Head AgainTomorrow PROVE BIG AT. TRACTION oe a a in the basement. fot & financial euccess, the |wit probably be continued year, The affairs of the leagu ‘The Saturday ey. rectors will be wound up this week./at Eilers Music House ‘The charges against Umpire Golden | great an attraction will be investigated |was filled long befor OY6 ARE TRAINING jand hundreds were turned SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 4-—One| 1? —. for tomorrow Round Hogan and Frank Burns of) i100 tn the soieeunt and | Oakland got down to bard training, “10 © the volees of the gi {for their 20-round battle here mext| "ser which will be | Monday afternoon, The f are| Vera's compositions there " ing the work of both, and a|* Pianoforie solo by Mag bourg. His rendition of po este Polonaise will be fr The Rows Athletic club trounced, Means of the WelteMig the Greenwood A.C, 15 to 8 at Wood. new and wonderful tras land park Monday. The teams which reproduces the setual furnished plenty of excitement and log of the most dis hit the ball hard formers. Thursday's concert — -—————— sine tomorrow at 3 o'clock SUIPHURRO BATHS) = Third and University, “JR RHEUMATISN: ~READ BOOKLET— All Dr-ggists Although it was leagne next di- thw STAR CLASSIFIED Western Monument were the first in America to appreciate the tower- a mouthpiece cigarette. The mouthpiece—originating among European epicures — was intro- in the Imperiales. It was an instant and emphatic Imperiales popularity rapidly spread eastward and continues to @ present enormous demand is a monument to Western The mouthpiece cools the smoke—keeps the t bacco dry—and gi you the rich flavor and fragrance which the Gans blender ‘we out to please you, Smoke drawn through a soggy stub loses much of these qualities. smoke in Imperiales as you do in the ordina throw away a paper mouthpiece instead of a stu! ghtfully containing tobacco which you paid for—but cannot smoke. This saving of one-third gi the high-grade, d pmo Ce IMPERIALES pe See ae | 10 for 10c Pennant coupen in every package

Other pages from this issue: