The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 24, 1912, Page 1

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PRIZE FIGHT CROWD ENGAGED IN NEAR RIOT, SILENT HINDU DIDN'T EVEN BLINK AN EYE BY FRED L, BOALT. | On the Hagen, the fighting baker, was given the decision | his left sat a Hindu’s right sat a tall, thin, nervous man On} aod whar Land slammed. And the battling smoke once or] in token of vic tory, somebody started something, I don't know ~ a short, fat, red-faced man, The thin man bet the} twice was dp Giles, of the 25th infantry, at Fort Lawton last night, | fat man that Giles would win, The thin man lost letheer Py V poved : 4 oa and his agmpathizers choked off their ‘who it was, Some bag sh a aa sian begin i : milling. There were those at the ring. byl ‘ 2 a } ‘alt uttered while he covered up to « cape punishment.) on Giles and lost A hard loser, he wanted to “get” the referee. of savage milling, t ‘e I] made a mind bet with myself that the Hindu would get And, “Yah! Yah!” sere ed th I 2 ! ) a ht the decision unfair to the negro soldier, excited before the fight was finished, I lost : at the thin dans, anu rt Hi d ni neg etd it bet! G soe pie At: 4 om “ec \ » ccomed ae ievent is capably and technically reported by the One end of the gymnasium was banked solid with soldiers,! Laff, why don't yah? Laff, yah boob! i es dog ppahed: thd fn _y . little while the te wd oa ‘. editor on an: r page 0 : | I rooting for Giles. ‘The Hagen followers were white civilians, | There was adandy rail | mth, Th | uncert in and i It : d th rs we ' lio : sporting editor, however, will not make mention oT! mostly, W hen the black man scored, the soldicrs roared. When “ a we andy rally in the seventh, ‘I ig fighters stoc cd rtain and inc ne an ing re bilious, ide enthusiast whose views on pugilism ought to be| Hagen scored, the civilians screamed with joy laine, i pe Poi nud is wae the Aghting: baker, th le a ae = a” h a Woe ? ee vot ag! The thin man shook his fist at the fat man under the Whereupon the tl _ I 7 | Me, base Cooney: eee Fe id - alone. He spoke to no one. He paid his $2 like| Hindus nose wladiee't 40 oe - pain ci to i feet anc begged weg tec Hindu waited for the crowd to get out. Emotions came os sgidier to sla 1¢ baker quickly, violently and co oor r r i i i od sport, and saw the last bout through to the end. His/ It was a good fight. It was a fight all the time. Awkward] His eyes blazed, } itching id his y | cored ite i> Wabcnd sacked ie at tose pe Monaghan its beard was-ton Gal Gia ie | pad : 4 axe Vs face was twitching, and his lean hands| I worked close to him and looked at his eyes. They were still . was black. is beard wa e 3 . S$ coat) and strong, the fighting baker lunged and swung and rushed] shook as with a palsy | as a jungle pool. His face was like a mask of clay. I looked : j continually, while the soldier, lithe and supple as a panther,| And the fat man, too, rose up, and implored the fighting | at his bearded lips to see them curl in a sneer They did not, a du he was beyond a doubt. One guessed that/he/ danced away, flitting like an illusive brown shadow. But now| baker to hit the soldier in the stomach, or in the tawecany And yet 1 know what he was thinking, He is, perhaps, a be a Hindu philosopher. His Oriental stoicism sat on) he would stop and dart in, and his arms would lash out vicious«| Ghe re, 80 long as the blow laid him senseless on the boards.! sage Senirek to thicvedne kne verby ts avel We ig Hike a garment. é | ly, and you could hear the sh arp impact of gloves on flesh, | The fat, man’s eyes bunged out of their sockets, sweat poure 1! a curion people Occide ; and lustful and What does a Hindu know it prize fighting? About) | And then the soldiers would roar, and the thin man mock| down his fat cheeks; his collar was wilted; his fat jowls were| strong, We bonct of our western civilive on. na ogress, Our = ae feints, coun Bese ae) _ all) the fat man, shouting: “Yah! Yah! Whadda yah think of th’ purplish; his pudgy hands beat the air like flails. — | achievement But our civilization is very new ' The Hindu of it? Who told him the fighting baker and the bat-/ smoke now? Yah! Yah!” But the Hindu sat with his hands folded on his t kno enee c oments of tension the i ¥ ake would mix it in the roped arena And why did The luminous eyes of the Hindu missed nothing. They | unmoved 1 haath aac ‘ i ry g Bache she : Poth ork Mie n al “ ri pals He ve to see the ba: Mea a ; darted glances everywhere. But not by a gesture of a hand, by| From the seventh to the 10th and last it was anybody's | no Sone’ ion. We are cave men who a little © ago di hy Ale had @ ringside s Vhe n the battling smoke’s see+) the quives of a muscle, by the flicker of an eyelash, did he be-| fight. The thin man yelled until his voice failed The fat man’s} leopard skins and stone hammers for tw id ting xis fanned him with a towel, the Hindu caught the breeze! tray emotion roar petered out to a gurgle. The best he could lo , jf fles ; ae wera : Be When they sprayed th ier rown body, a-gleam |} It was a rattling fight. There was no stopping the fight-| tieulate, breathe hard and glare at the thin man When all were gone from the gymnasium, the Hindu strode gweat, the Hindu caught the overflow Jing baker. The Irish in him was up. It always is. He rushed | When the referee held up the glove of the fighting baker,| out and entered a taxi, and was driven away. ocx The Seattle St Seattle.” was __THE ONLY PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE aaa = VOL. 14. NO. 177. Ss SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1912.) ONE CENT CRIM ANS, HOME EDITION LLS DIVORCED WIFE, THEN HIMSELF | ‘YOUNG BOY SEES FATHER AND MOTHER AKEY FURTH says he will leave Seattle if another recall election comes along. Proof again that every cloud has its silver lining. | - - : ‘This morning Tenney apparently 4 was making a frenzied attempt to oe Baas "s ai FAMOUS ACTRESS WHO ROSE TO GREAT- Caldwell this morn-| mediately made his get-away. She father with sto Lewis Tenney, | z of Deputy Fi Nigger ete yg me nes, Lew! ¥, tloned himself at the corner to to hold two girls,em-| This morning they told their ACCUSED BY TWO | BURGLAR’S GUN BUT | SHOT TO DEATH ON BALLARD STREET Prevent the shooting by pelting his) i). Kinling, and he pur od i eer eeet store, story te Deputy Prosecutor Cait wott |@m operation, and that, fearing she 7 [rie Lund, on a street corner in Bal- | noviae tie wae an kis bap SOE s , mth eed Desaty Wheritte Lexenaoe saa Bieee | might never return, she had given 4 jlard, then crossed the street and | when his father stopped him and killed himself. The shooting oc een pe igad @ short hy med | Then Mrs. Lund appeared and Ten- curred shortly after 8 this morning | ney at Gua ut at 1 with < at the corner of 65th av. andinher He seized her by the neck fi- overlook * { f Jones st. nally as though to strangle her. te ds her “1 nee yaa ‘ The boy was practically crazed | She broke away and started to rum, take your rings off before you go ta when he realized that the quarrel Pritt a tie ete me His eee as soft as & between his father and mother | ney was further aggravated yester: clety belle’s. would result in serious conse-|day because of a threat that he “I guess you don’t do much |quences. When hie mother tore| would be compelled by the court | work,” the woman said, jherself away from his father andjto pay back alimony for the main jattempted to find safety in the cor-| tenance of the children. |ner house, the boy picked up some] Tenney was a brother of Dr. Ce | |small stones and hurled them at his/cil E, Tenney, a dentist, in the “Thirty-five cents. You'ro wok | come to that, or anything else can find—only don't frighten father. But bis mother did not get|Leary building. He was about 45 the children any more than you have ale all her jewelry to relatives By pio the warrant as prosecut-/ are now on the doctor's trail. you got well, o! The doctor is alleged to have In § sheriffs office Is confident! duced the girls to go with him for (a who the man is and) an aeto ride late Saturday night. t the, lodge him in jail to! When they reached the house on a . He is said to be connected lonely road near Richmond Beach “medical institete.” they all entered, and then the girls to the story told by the discovered that they were prison- girl, the doctor was alarmed ers. One of the girls escaped at 1 girl made her excape o'clock Sunday ‘bt and gave the ¥ morning He im-| alarm. = ese a) . y if a woman won't cook for her husband, she must | Sepect alimony from this court when she applies for a divorce,” is M4. Indxe Monroe in the domestic relations court bere i a divorce between Mildred and Richard Lewis. ering quaims of conscience for having deprived of even the smaliest part of his wealth, a young f Thomas Dunne of New Orleans today, in a letter asked the Fmission to keep a penny found on the Rockefeller estate to Cleveland. Young Dunne is anxiously awaiting a reply. Lorimer jones, in a conversation in the Butler notel, ad- sknew nothing of the hich cost of living; claimed clothing ‘ he was a boy; sald that when meat got too high peo- ‘Mop eating \t; when butter got too high, people should stop Cannon himself could no farther go. States government report of September 23 says sugar, eggs, further than a few steps up the/years old. The woman was 40. jstoop to the house when Tenney,| The bodies were removed to the jcoming up close to her, fired bis | undertaking parlors of Graham @& first shot right trough her breast | Engemann. and instantly killed her. Er Pree Tenney paid no attention to the NEW DIVORCE RULE boy but crossed the street and stop- NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—-Her ped for a moment under a fruit tree.|™an Feuer asked for a divorce, He saw some men rushing toward] Saying his wife shied plates at the scene and he quickly pointed} him when he tried to kiss her the gun to his breast and fired. He| 00d bye. Justice Marean refus- lay there motionless for almost a} 4 the divorce, saying it would |minute, apparently dead. Suddenly] @courage other wives to im} he raised himself, picked up the gun} tate. and again fired through his breast. He died instantly then. BROKE BY MURDER Young Lewis, stunned with grief NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—Miss and crazed with the horrible sight,| Julia Curran was mysteriously y “Ob, I don’t want to hurt any+ body.” The woman was calm now. “You ought to be ashamed of yourself!” she said. The burelar laughed Mrs. E. M. McDonald, who had a| “Then quit before they burgiar as a midnight guest. “Tt can't Anyhow, Two burglars called at the rel |” "Can't you turk that revolver the dence of E, M. McDonald, 1929) other was? ee oat Sere flour, butter, lard 4 tol pak, I, ‘hops, 1 ' > petsines at eayaeed gta oradln gi ones Ne war cont | Boren av., at 1:45 this morning, and,| “it won't go off, unless holler ‘ § H still stood on the opposite corner,} murdered at the Hotel Boule- a t Sugar increased but §.5 per cent, |While one remained outside, the/ again. It would make * ble hole : mechanically throwing stones at his| ard a few weeks ago. Rein- Still, the same government tells | Other entered by a window and held) He backed away, { . father. He was finally taken away| holds Busse, the hotel proprie and vote for the old gang Mrs. McDonaid, who was in bed, at/ searched the room. Bat ¢ from the scene by neighbors and is| tor, is now a bankrupt. His pe- dail cet, the lawyers get. the money, but ne one has [one Punt OF & revelver for halt 28 revolver ‘was trained vy — now at the Warford real estate of-| tition blames the tragedy. ’ “4 hour. 4 fice, on 24th av. \that the money received from the fake sale of Irondale lots|""An alarm was given by noith-| "then the front doort un sel Sabscmii wisken duane MASHER MASHED bors but the lone burglar fled only | ously, Voices came from Witpowst Although the couple had been di-| NEW YORK, Sept. 24—Dr. D, Parker, the wireless faker, because of bad hearing.| when the pollee were pounding at | «7; stay here.” “All right, €0 e-4 yorced for abont tures vente and} W,.Warren tried to fire with D. Hiliman can give a mach better reason for the door. Hoth he and his confed-|:round back, and if he comes : Mrs. Tenney had married again, she erate escaped, though it is thought |thet way, I'll get him.” went back to live with Tenne: fiance, Robt. Spahn, hove into one of them was wounded by a shot) ‘They wore the voices of Cycle) MM® PATRICK CAMPBELL, REPORTED DYING IN LONDON | Tint folk fe tite co for the sake| view. Spahn hit the doctor so from a cycle cop's revolver. Cope Blaine and Fuqis, who, not-} Mrs, Patrick Campbell, who {s}several times, coming over in vau-|of the children, according to Mrs.| hard he was unconscious for 16 fled by neighbors across the street, reported seriously ili at her home, deville two years ago, “for the |F. E. Parker, 2307 W. 67th st, a — whose house the burglars had en-|33 Kensington square, London, and|money that's in it,” she frankly|neighbor. The Tenneys lived at WIFE GAVE SIGN for whose recovery but faint hopes admitted. Later she tried “The | 6724 Jones av. Besides their boy Maite, are entertained, is one of the few | Foolish Virgin,” but it ventured too| Lewis, there is a girl, Lucile, 11 NEW YORK, Sept. 24.—-Irvin Miss Agnes Finan, just as her ‘the mountains will be a fine thing for automobile en- Meantine, the farmers of King county can drag along The woman on the bed was « The United States marine band will start from here light sleeper, A shaft of light, en- FOR & concer! to) Pac ow wir of Pacific coast cities, zs tering through the bedroom win- Mareschai von Bieberstein, German ambassador to er cated in @ round splotch our Fs wi ven a divorce Hl t stage characters who gained |far in its sex problem, and she re-| years old. W. Graves’ was gi Ft ak James, died suddenly today at Badenweiler, Germany. | which danced upon the wall, the| "you'd better Rive aver night |turned to London. She brought! fut the quarrels grew more fre-| When he produced an agree- Yuan Shai Kai today is busily preparing to pro- | floor, the furniture of the room, aNd /an and laughed. the police. hat Mrs, Leslie Carter, Ameri-;over “The Sorceress” in 1904 and| quent every day between the two.| Ment his wife signed, promis. alleged fomenting of rebellion in Mongolia and | finally traveled over the bed on| Then Jumps Through Window. {ca’s preeminent emotional actress, | “Electra” in 1907, Tenney is said to have grown ex-| !8 that, if she stayed out all Geeupation of Thibet, which the woman lay. “No hurry,” iio cai Wecters beacloonace, be i — = = It crossed her eyes, which open- : waged ed, She saw the tt and the Bae ak pnd ph Campbell has been to the world’s dancing spot, and, sleep befuddled, Boy, Judge || You Bet, Grandpapa’s = || wondered what they meant. were Erie Serine, Oak. Oe Mrs. Campbell's daughter, Stella |tremely jealous of Mr. Lund, the| M&ht again it would be a sign | Patrick, wan martied-iat, fear tolessond’ hosband ‘ah the wanederes she wanted Graves to kill him stage. In versatility, Inspiration Mervyn W. H, Beach, a noted Brit-| woman. He also demanded that| °° and general artistic accomplish: |ish preacher's son; her son, Alan, she remarry him, neighbors say. ground, Then he returned to the! ment, she follows closely Modjeska,| married Miss Helen Bull, a Chicago | About a week ago, Lund visited his “iat tabi gs ide petals: The shaft found an open dooriteq “1 know you didn't notify|Bernhart, Ellen ‘Terry and Clara|society girl. Both Alan and his | wife at the Tenney home, and since RATHER POREG * Own Way Check Is Good Start }} into the dining room, and, through |tnem,” he auld. “I'll be d—~ it 1| Morris sister have followed their mother that time the trouble became|* Fair tonight, light frost; ® it, Into the front room, where two) know who did, Well, I'll be on my| Her greatest successes have been|in choosing their vocation. They | violent. * Wednesday fair and warmer. * young girls were sleeping. The | way Good-bye. roblem plays. In fact, the vehicle | have played in their mother’s com-| Last night Mrs, Lund and the|* Temperature at noon, 53. * woman's eyes followed the shaft “Good-bye, id the woman, which she traveled into fame) pany, in America and in London. children left the Tenney home and| && ke XR RKKRKEKREKEEK and saw, bending over the bed, the |~you'g better quit burgl and fortune in a night was so frank: | — - figure of a man. “Ill think it over,” he Mung over|ly “problem” that it was declined | « nue 2 Prete t Movagenivg his shoulder, by Jobn Hare, for whose tt was | Peants SAY a borse when:|a lucky child will cry during the |lar to that which came through the] rrone the open divine teow ated Wit natanty okt The Second 249.80 unobserved. Judge | ceremony, the infant girl of Lord | window. dow. “Good-bye, sonny,” he said to| In the title Rnd arrangements | and Lady Deeies, formerly Vivian} And.then the woman knew. the boy on the couch, and slid noise queray, Mrs. Campbell and the Pony breeder near| Gould, uttering lusty screams, was She obeyed the feminine Instinct leasly through. i Ma: 26, 1893, at the St, James the- 1 boy has been sentenc- | christened Eileen Vivian de ta Poer|to scream. “tel! Police!” Officer Blaine shot at a dim figure} tre, London. Within three hours HERE’S THE REASON M é ovelheigl horses every| Beresford, in the historle church at] Instantly the man switched offlay it taded swiftly Into the Might. fake was heralded tar and wide. a e Ribuatiee he is tired, | Stoke Pogis. the light, and, Sree. ee to new-born etar of the first theatrical the dining room. He must have magnitude. being that he| George J. Gould's gift to his ? poem ie Ss otodtine Sent, for, owes Mrs. Campbell visited America The Seattle Star each evening reaches ie. grandchild was a fat check. he stepped briskly, he made no GRIEVES FOR DOG over 40,000 Homes, and carries your noise. On a« couch tn che dining room BROOKLYN, Sept. 24.—Un- a “ was Vere McDonald, a boy of 13, Jess 14-year-old Fred Usher, af Want Ad to the firesides of over 200,000 who, awakened by his mother's| FARGO, N. D. Sept. 24-For] ¢icted with a weak heart, finds eam his feet and | more than 20 years the damage suit} pis lost bull terrier, doctors say . , eee tronted the burglar with|ot Harriet Barlow against the| pe will die of sorrow. ‘The dog readers. The Star is Seattle’s HOME Kas., Sept. 24. | (By United Press Leased Wire) opt nes | LONDON, Sept. 24.—Greatly de- Mt Erle Bickethaupt ot Nghting superstitious persons who stealing horses,| Cling to the housewife bellef that } | } { | } | | | NM ‘Special Baseball Feature Hugh Jennings on Big Series Boy Threatens Burglar. Northern Pacific Railroad Co. hag th, my malt fete Clee ee. se tee shout-|Resttimvcourt. ‘The state suemet ye paper, and as such places your ad ttle Star anno a big ich wi o je. “You've got court 1s now asked for a rehearing ADETS ALL SICK? : Widay on the sporting: page Which Will com Bil se: Msinass’ hore” And he e@-[Of;the.case begun two decades age! SODGne. mT, Boyt, 24-- WHERE YOU WANT IT— in Seattle’s ~otawll page. j vanced upon the robber. died, two of the attorneys of the| For the first time female train- H Bri d ings, manager of the Detroit club, has writ- The man turned on him with a) f°! which undertook th ease have| ed nurses have been called to jomes. ring your want ad to our Stories from the standpoint of a baseball man, JJ) threat and a snarled oath. died and two of the material wit-| the naval hospital to nurse ill * 2 the Giants and Red Sox, who will meet in the ig dopa oti onel ge moth! nesses are dead, Mrs. Barlow hag| officers and enlisted men. downtown office, 229 Union street (with OS series, yi e . oa . been dead for some years, Fam z ‘The burglar came on to the bed- . 5 . Metre, an intimate friend of McGraw, a manager of ry of hod been ia pablo Rng fg Pyare Dad Soreneed oe ns. tat ee. Souvenir & Curio Shop) or phone Elliott a : : rathe : ‘. f ‘ll gene, PC, bas battled against the victorious Red fil puttt, Though it was not masked, through the Barlow homestead. Mré.| 24,—Mra, da Hawley, tired of 44 or Main 9400. Your ad will be in- Season. We know of no one better qualified to tell Hj} his face was in the shadow, Seed, smiitialank pretianedbindied for Ret erie toneneemmnites ie . ” ” > - 2 her . 1 and weak points of the rivals, itle teen Reane Oe La Datel g oi her property. suicide, expressing in a last serted and bill sent you. ° note, her love for Frank Susak, wealthy Japanese, eanY OVER 40, MORE CONTEMPT ,000 PAID COPIES DAILY SANDUSKY, O., Sept. 2 . Mrs, Geo, O, Halla, Cleveland, caused her husband to be en- joined from telephoning her from here, or trying to meet her. EE [a Te Sa a eT) Stahi, Story is an estimate of the managers—McGraw The second | The third deste the cold muzzle of the revolver against her cheek, “no more noise.” KILLED BY LIVE WIRE. m not frightened now,” the} TACOMA, Sept. 24.—John Welsh, woman answered, “and I shall not) 20 jior, was in- 4 + ge " scream again.” rly this mornin 1 Compares the infields and outfields. “It wouldn't do you al hen he grabbed a live electric “som eg the man who will be the hefo of the series wire in the power house of the Ta- bea SUrprise to every reade: who's here. Your jewelry, please.” | coma Railway and Power company. : f fe His voice was low, well-modulat-| Sixty thousand volts passed through ed and mild. his body, pares the pitching staffs. with the catchers.

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