The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1912, Page 2

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The difference between finely tatlored, made -to- measure @othes and the ordinary ready made is so marked that men Who would be well dressed can Rot afford to wear the latter We have an extraordinary large stock of the choicest suit {ngs and staples on the marke for $25, $30 $35 Why not place the tailoring of your fall suit In our bands? _-- FROST & CO. Successors to FROST & O'N 1205 Piret Av. C..ITO & BROS. Who r Po JAPANESE ART GOODS, BAMBOO FURNITURES, 1116 84 Ave. Elitett 4459 M. TOKUYA, go HIPPODROME, SEATTLE'S NEW DANCING PALACE. Fifth and University. 5 Cents Per Couple. BULL BROS. Just Printers 1013 THIRD AVENUE 1043 Phone Main 963 yres Transfer Co. Office 114 Jackson St. Sulphurro B Baths |, FOR RHEUMATISM READ BOOKLET— tm 1 they're gy ee JACOBS: te P-1. Bids. Hotel Ethelton Our rater are tt Keeping with the times. $4 to $7 a week. Thc * Qnd $1 per day. Near ail large Stores and theatres. Oppestic Postoffies. ALBERT HANSEN Established 1883 PRECIOUS STONES, FINE JEWELRY, —Angeiceh ig Nelo Corner First and erry SEATTLE DANCING Dancing taught in 2 days. Private instruc- tion. Lessons every day and event nirro only Seanauiaed ry date 4a: cing lemy In Beattl ainaaanie “SEATILE THEATRE TONIGHT AND ALL WREK fhe Grand O14 tan of New England i THE OL) HOMESTEAD” splendid company, same fa- scenes, the Grace church the Swanzey band, the famous fe malic quartet. Lice nienttitiatclatinnets Both Phones 6106. ‘The Distinguished Actress 1A BINGHAM a Company OTHER ORPHEUM ACTS ’ gia & in =n ress — f Pp LT gy OD Ma DANCE, DU. VioLIne” 10—PEOPLE—10 G—Other Wig 8. & O. Acte—5 e PANTAGES ee Dally Twice Nightly Ned Wayburn's MINSTREL MISSES irl Act? Big, Beautiful her Great Features 10¢ and 200, = See i ive = = =m) PrrEye 335233 City Office, 713 Second Avenue. jthe first five Innings. The Boston players o snfident because } than first came. | tossed battle. |denly same me b hey feared Jiante. Stahl, Wagner, 68 «... Cady, Wood, Devore, Lf see 2D veers tL Deyle, | erzog, 3D. Meyers, ¢ «+ Fletcher, ss Tesreau, p, *MoCormick Crandall, p. - TON, Oct game, SCOOP NOW SCOOP HERG 1S YOUR PRESS Pass hr THE WORLD'S Bese PALL Stes - we, CAREFUL OFF 1T™ AS THERE WL Be LOTS OF Pick. POCKETS AROL THE CUB REPORT , ball bistory, Christy be mainapring of the Giants’ twirl | Same. ing squad, adorned the bench In instead of the spotlight on the firing line, For the first time in Manhattan’s|down came, Jake Stahl had some- too, the Giants |body there with the big kick It lost the jump by allowing Joo Wood | was either Wood, Speaker, Hooper and his teammates to take the first/or Yerkes, but there was always post season history For the first time 9.—It’s now up to} Wood has shown them while he ts A ‘id tine game and fMashy, hie system is tc nits also composed of @ network of nerves, an oa lt sown ‘e season base] and that he ts likely to become en- $15 $25 Mathewson, | tangled tn them at any stage of the - RAINCOATS Today Matty tries But in, and, won't admit it. counts, it has e starts, the » lacks the hs De led by “ and counts big, imbued boys with confidence the big punch world’s baseball ¢ “Osark Joft" ure to pitch better but then Joe Wood IND. 5200 |'s. too. Neither was in top form in|Urday. Palliag before him, they ——_——-—- {the first game, although the Giant | "7° likely to bump into a better and mastodon cut & brilliant streak for|™0re compact pitcher when they next face Tesreau. re extremely| Poston has shown Its attacking they upset Tes-|power and sharp fielding ability. ina Red Sox a le Athletics, but | will be equal to the task Wood pitched and c Cuecorasiek batted for Score by tnnings— picked By aaa %, ER TS UP 10 MATTY WY ak, Sot Ra TO SAVE GIANTS BY GRANTLAND RICE BOS" good old Matty, n New York's post to re-|the right man in the right spot with trleve what the younger generation | the right goods, aside. It will be some job,| ‘The Giants carried the more bril- but there are thousands of baseball! jiant faushes, but they could not jfans and fannettes throughout the} run out their string. At the big fcountry who believe that "Big Six” Roston won.| man to handle in that fatal seventh, That tells the story of yesterday's|with two out-—but he couldn't “Smoky Joe” Was! handle him. The Giants needed |doomed until his pals rushed sud-|hut one more hit in the ninth— pugnacious” | Speaker, yanked him safely out of rouble. The edge lies with the | Red Sox now ampionship. Tesreau is almost ball the nex’ reau, the terrible mammoth whom/| The Giants’ main show résts with He's the greatest fan in Am@riea | 7 ome strong, new talent in the line above all the other| Matty, Tesreau and Marquard pitch-|is Frank “Silivers” Oakley ‘ . \up. The team wants « practice The Giants also are confi-|ing up to top form. Ordinary pitch- Yes, that ts “Stivers,” the | «ame for next Sunday, and on the t, because they not only see in|ing can't turn the trick againat @|young chap in the pleture. powerful club|club likely to break up the game in}the ludicrous clown person because |any insing, with any section of it#| does the baseball pantomime aw | they discovered they can hit Wood, | batting order up. Orpheum this week, and he w é at jter, manager, Hotel Brunswick, . ol, calculating : e of Bender, Plank and Coombs, the Boston— Hooper, r. t Yerkes, fb .. Speaker, 0 f . Lewts, Lt Gardner, reste: 00 o°0 1 Hits—Otf Wood 4, off Towreau 5, off Crandall 1, Throe- jand loves them all. Twobase bits—Hooper, Yerkes, Wagner, Innings by Tesreau 7, by Crandall 2. Struck out—By Wood | ee —— 11, by Tesreau 4, by Crandall 3, Double play—tahl to Wood. Vaapteen, —Nattonals, Kiem and Rigler; American, O'Loughlin and Evans. ia Geaene Meyers. Bases on balls, off Wood 2, off Tesreau 4, My idea of nothing at ali—The enthusiasm of the sporting editor as|| market affords. We can sat fy he anawers phone call No. 7,649,823 on the opening day of the world’s} ¥0¥ &° Where the crowle se series, Big Chief Meyers may get along better this year than In the 1911 world’s series, because he won't have Big Chief Bender to put the In clan sign on him, Pondering over the money Jim McAleer has made and will make this year out of the Boston Red Sox, we are sorry that we ever spoke slightingly of James when he managed the dub aggregation of St. Louls Browns, season after season, and just kept out of the cellar. John W. Considine, who fresided at Sunday’s race meet at the Meadows, bids fair to become as much of a leader in sporting circles LEAS in oe Lng as his famous partner, Big Tim Sullivan, is in the East. Never So Reasonable Considine’s latest gift to sportdom is the John W. Considine motorcycle a Johnny Neas, another marine, in cup, to be contested for in a 30-mile race next Sunday, Never More Beautiful Queen Anne high school’s 34 to 0 victory over Franklin high Mon- Have Your Dental : day is one more step in the elimination contest toward the city cham pionship. The little Franklin boys put up a game scrap against over- vey Donaldson, who has a sprained whelming weight. Incidentally, the rough-neck element from Broadway high has pretty nearly killed interscholastic sport by ite rowdy work last Saturday on| ygodern Methods, Modern Baul a street car coming back from the West Seattle game. Probably the| ment and the desire to introdtic school board will relent from its oruel decision to end all out-door| out bigh-class work makes It pos- sport, but not until the youngsters have a healthy scare thrown into|f,aucements in to acquire vo them, Senttle-Vancouver (Direct) turning vie L rensoroe oa Leave ——— a attle SAILING FROM PIER 1, ‘ancouver Canadian Pacific Railway STUAMSHIPS ON “THIANGLE” SERVICE Phone Main ee ef he Boston won the opener because It occupying | had the punch in the pinch, both at but “Mueesy” Mo|¥@s enough The Giants had iGraw and his fighting aggregation 3u But the ae Roston danced to the melody of the Speed 1 want what I want when I want and that ts fight for the |~they sot It. Next Time Deposit It in a Safety Vault, Scoop ei MOU WD YOUR NO PiKroaer Gers THis — = Hr peabiaged ak PASS -Because. VE Gor , ; : SOCK AND Sore OOK VT HIDDEN IN MY Socig,/ THE STAD -WEDNEAD AS, OCTOBER 9, 1912. im. «, known d at bis home nlordaye the 4 in 1889. STUER, SHOE, SOCK An0, Ee 66 99| wick Pee DEAD P| ALL? ITS A GOOD THING NHAUSER “You Diner MIE FT ieee notte aaa, ee ee be OUR, PANTS | pane 6 oo 2d and Pike 4 Finley. ‘io years of #- _ Instrumental and Voea TRACIE oom 208 MEALS AT ALL HOURS Traders’ Bide a 905 1-2 Third Avenue a la Carte, Today Your Bra Suit Is Ready on t eminent ready-tow h woolen are res in this ar clothing. Our tock fs the new models for men young fellows priced from at $25 to $40 This trio were simply Inhuman, but} From Craveneties to you will find our stock of proof garmen's complete, with the convertible straight military collagg sizes. Priced from $18 and upwards, 7-_—_-_-_— See the Special Window Display bat and in the box, When the show- spot they fell abort, but only by an eyelash. Tesreau bad but one more they didn’t get it. Roston had but one opening, It three—they weren't enough. And there, gentle reader, you are. 4O' PER ye jc.co COREY SIGNCQ Viewed from the angle of the Pitchers in Tuesday's firet battle, Boston, by trimming | raising struggle. | Matty this afternoon, would be in] .. a position to close the series Sat WASHINGTON PARK READY FOR GAMES The Washington Park football team has organized for the season, with most of the old players and SET ANDO MADISON jfollowing Sundays will be pre- pared to meet the best of the local jamateur talent. Address Ed Hun- bo | CONCARNE, ETO. Free 411 Ard Av. bet. Union va ‘Pike. | First and Columbia. erday’s detailed score tells} be with Barnum and Bailey tory of the battle, Every spring “Slivers” Onk H around the big league ¢ camps, practicing with and getting pointers for his act, which has become famous wherever lvaudeville meets baseball. Every ummer morning, no matter what town he is in, “Siivers” is out at the ball park joining in the practice, for baseball players all over the continent are his friends. J Tinker is his chum and Harry Dav! is his pal. Cliff Blankenship, once Seattle's favorite catcher, gave Slivers the catcher’s mitt that he uses in his act. Tinker’s bat, that knocked the famous home ran on the Polo grounds in 1909 and won & pennant for the Cubs, is one of those which Stivers displays. It has never hit & ball since it drove the famous wallop into the far center field bleachers of the New York park, Oakley, out of his clown make-up, is a tall, blue-eyed clean-cut chap, who thinks, talks, lives and acts baseball. Also he plays It. He has caught Rube Waddell’s benders, R #8. &, {and stood up at bat before Christy 6 1 8 Buy your drugs of Bartell, See list page 5. an b ‘ i e 4 4 i wo en lromoconen 2 o S| wwemnrenne> Creme a eo lemmocommn j - BSlecewerFewwa | Ramen ween 5 weno SLIVERS OAKLEY The Famous Baseball Clown as He Ie in Real Life SeeWhat’s Doing HAGEN IS for a three-m sid “ nt, and are in position to cnne the music Sita people ot Romeo Hagen, the local welter- Bectuic a treat such ae they sel dom get. In addition to the or weight whom nobody around Seat cheatra, our entertainers cannot {tle could stop, got the surprise of be SUPAMOD. ving tor enter. {| lis young life last might at Brem- tainment, we can satisty you I }lerton, when Charlie Fox, champion you are looking for a place where Ste no object in ita selection fjof the navy, was awarded a de- best of qverything (bl) cision over him after six fast rounds, It was a hard and closely fought mill, and Hagen thought a draw was the worst he could get, but Ducky Doyle, who refe d, THR Horpnau CAFE AN thought the satlor had the edge on GRILL points, Romeo is so unused to los- Virst and Madison tng that he felt a little put out, and offered to fight Fox again tonight, or this morning, or any other old time, He will probably be reward ed with a return mateh at an early date. Cook Goodrich, of the marines, went six rounds to a draw with Loule Rue, of Bremerton and Slug: ger O'Neil, of Port Orchafd, beat 900138 0 4 , |Mathewson's fadeaway. When it 230000 0 i-s comes to baseball players, he knows They are a ys Slivers. fine bunch of fellows, jace to meet your friends—on fertainment every afternoon from 2:30 to 6:00 and from 6:00 to 1:00 IMPERIALES » ie ate ob ee} “Fallow age “Some men roll their own cigarettes—not so much from preference as from custom. They have — their friends converted ot Imperiales but have put opting the modern mouthpiece cigarette “a have a. message for these men: ss a ey al : better smoke—a higher “The mouthpiece cools the smoke ‘and gives a the full aroma ‘and aks of art ou can’t get this through a moistened “Imperiales mean no stained fin ger! ‘loose’ tobacco in ag ets eee four rounds, Harry Merri¢k, who is a boxer, went on with Flagh Nel son in a wrestling bout and got a draw, He was substituting for Har. eee ankle. The Pacific Athletic club Wor at ut ates staged the events. ; Ue RESULRS COAST LEAGUE RES! Oakland 5, Sacramento 2 ortland isco &. fame post death of Wm sible for us to offer the following Noted ot (Heine) ftw your influence and patrona ‘ ane | are making 7 LY =x = Se sae ‘eshee STANDING OF = out va LOGAN VS, FRANDE CHOWNS FOR #3 108 4 OAKLAND, Cal,, Oct. 9,—It will THE 'T $7.50 AND 815.00 POR. be a case of the army against the|cmLAIN CROWNS FOR #150 TO navy when Frank Logan, middle-| #74 weight champion of the army, ; Sacramento meets Sailor Frande before the Wheelmen’s club here, In a ten- round battle tonight. Six fast a sina Meant Oh eebic carpet—on the table cfoth. You leave no six-round and two four-round bouts y GUaRAN TEND) LOUISVILLE, Ky. Oct, 9.—With are on the card, in addition to the | WORK. 92 pounds up, Miss Thorpe, at 30 10 for 10c behind you with Imperial es. a main event. The American Cut- to 1, broke the American record for Made with Mouthpieces “So I say buy a pack af Imperiales—om ke, _ ~ a mile and 20 yards at Churchill a this iieties Gam. Renters: Sokove, “ Downs, covering the distance in Pennant coupon in every m n cigaret! Purniture Company. * =| Rate Dentists | 1:39 nat. The previous record was Package igarette, = y een = 1 Shain’ held by Col. Ashmeade, who set ‘our dru eeds supplied. See rT rr-Boy’ the mark at 1:293-5 on the same Bartell's ad page 5, oe 6193 First Ave., Building track, October 6, 1911 ili

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