The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 4, 1914, Page 7

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le 2 BP | BES S@ssseer) RPSeE REtm FeaSKlFere POORSSAITERS EST RST ei sFee25a82 asl SM SSFET SS RFT WATERFRONT LANDS @ ACRES WATER FRONT FX With running wate wk; fare 28 Oscar Brows Bangor WATER FRONT DANNER INV or ACRE « ORTON BLK DODOOOGOOOOOOOOOONOOO OOK EXCHANGES Bai Tw at ity F Bide SWATI. YN NT, IN Fina? 92,0 v f equal ih 4500 Vi vaiue $1.0 Address M212, Star ARLE Aes $1 REAL ESTATE LOANS “7 LOCAL, MONRY WEST & WHE 54%, joney on improv make duflding loans CALHOUN, DENNY Alaska 1 property & RWINO « FO LOAN or Improved & MORFORD Cotman Ride Vintee L Before buy GRO. A. VIRTUR MONEY TO LOA unimproved property Wylde, New York Rik ‘O.. Boston Btk no del me ible for any debts which she may contract upon my credit. KS. HUDSON OLD PIKE Heat granulated sugar, § Ibe Be; comb 2 Ibe 360; English walnuts, NW YNPROVED AND | the AUTO RACES IN SEATTLE JULY 18-19 The plan to make Seattle one « automobile racing centers of the The world {9 progressing rap Northwestern Speedway Co ation today gave out as definit« dates for tts twoday racing program to be conducted here this The meet will open July 18, closing the followtr day Joseph J. Henry, one of the of |fiocers of the company, this morning announced that Frank Lowry, one of the best known starters in the world, and an assistant to Fred Wagner, had joined the corporatior permanently, Lowry ts now tn Cali fornia, and has telegraphed the com pany to the effect that he has made arrangements for five Callfornian entrants. He is expected in Seattle during the coming week EXHIBITION GAMES Vancouver couver 2. Beaumont Beaumont 1 Fort Worth, Tex Saskatoon 3, Van New York Giants 6, Chicago White Sox 6, Fort Worth 3 Washington—Washington 19, U of Vermont 0. Nashville, Tenn.—Boston Red Sox 7, Nashville 4 Brooklyn—-New York Americans 6, Brooklyn 1. Loulsville—Cincinnat! ville 1 Atlanta, Ga.—Boston Nationals 3, Atlanta 8. 6, Louis | SE, poravea| , ORden, Utah—Spokane 11, Og: can of Karo syrup. den 6. Ife Gill plokies, 100 i fancy lemons, Te ; extra large each; 6% Ibs. dest sugar, of best ripe oltves, $1 with other yellow corn meal, 2% is or wheat, Ihc; pt. bottle of catsup, 18 Se Ib; tomatoes, i0e and spinach, 3 ibs. Ifc; new potatoes, § the. New Callfornia potatoes, 3 Ibs ie Ih: Cal ; Cuba tomatoes, the Ib. asparagus tips, 10 ID; blu $e 1%; eueumbe @4 butter, 360 Bic dos, peanut qreamery butter. FORSAKES JOYS } OF CHILDHOOD TO ~ BEPRIMA DONNA 20 rounds to a draw in this city; last night { . Best modern outside rooms tn | FIGHT IS DRAW SAN FRANCISCO, April 4.—Jim my Clabby and Billy Murray went Seattle, 26c to 50¢. Stewart House, 86 West Stewart (near Pike Pub! Market).—Advertisement. LOCAL POOL GAME | OUT DRAWS ALLEN Carrying out a plan suge by Champlon Rennte Allen hia recent visit to Seattle gene Way, proprietor of White House parlora, is doing wonders teward the advance ment of pocket-billiards tn Seat t Previously, every prefer ence was given to billiards b Friday afternoon and night a crowd larger than that which attended — th Atlen-Maturo serios, witnessed the mateh between Butler, the Northwest title vider, and Chas, Jordan, British Columbia champ. Jordan took the first game, 100 to 9 1 the second, 100 to 72, Th players meet again today and tonight NEW YORK FANS AWAITING BOUT | WITH INTEREST | feiss ! . | By Hal Sheridan | NEW YORK, April 4—Fight jfans of little old New York are anxiously awaiting the outcome of the RitchleMurphy bout tn San Francisco on the evening of Apri! 17. They want to know whether have underestimated the lit Harlemite all these years. ‘ound the metropolis Leach Cross ts considered a far better fighter th Murphy, while quite | the reverse is true {n San Fran cleco. | We want to find | prominent fight promoter, “whether our judgment is rotten or not. Out in San Francisco they say Murphy is one of the best lightwoights {1 out,” sald a the game. Here tn his home town we take this statement with a grain of salt. San Franciscans |potnt to Tommy's easy victory jover Ad Wolgast. They say he }proved his worth {n those two bouts, Those who saw Ritchte in his }10round bout with Leach Cross h were forced to admit that the | Californian is a real champion, no | matter what his enemies may say EDGAR PALMER HAS DONAT 4 $300,000 for Princeton U. stad um THE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE |) MARRIAGE PROBLE CHAPTER Cxx (Copyright, 1914, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association) Symone dinner the air seemed to be charged with some undefinable unrest. Eliene was dis- traught. Eleanor seemed to be watehfully waiting Dick became more and more {irritable as the meal proceeded. Harry was mis- chievous, and I could feel that my own nerves were on edge. The conversation drifted around to the marriage problem (which it almost always does when Elfene ts Helen Bishop. LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 4 Some of the things that little Helen Bishop must do and must not do tn order to become a rival of Tetraz- zint: She must not eat pickles— or tarts or cream puffs or any- thing sweet that little girls Ii She must stand on her toe and do a lot of breathing exer- cises every morning at 7:30. She must do lots of gym- nastics. And she must live in a musi- cal atmosphere that will per- vade and permeate her whole being. In order to develop not only the voice, but the body, soul, character, temperament and mentality of little Helen Bishop, the 11-year-old must-| eal prodigy, Thor Raje, musician and vocal instructor, is to be given full legal control over the child, it the court grants the request filed by the parents. Iife and childhood to training to be- come the future queen of song. Only way to make a singer perfect. DANCING Souvenir Pennants At DREAMLAND TONIGHT SOUVENING FOR ALly LADIES FREE | Thor Raje believes this is the one of the party) and I found out that both Dick and Harry, although of distinctly different dispositions and temperaments, brought up in different environments and In very different circumstances, had the same rooted opinion that “when a woman was good she was very, very good, and when she was bad she was horrid.” It seems strange to me that men have such queer {deas of women that they do not guess that we are the same as they—a queer jumble of virtues and vices. They seem to want to think of weak to them. If they did but know it, we are petty at times and unselfish at others We can be more tender than masculine mag. as even Rudyard Kipling says we are. I don't believe that any man puts a woman on a pedestal until ‘The child is to give up her entire| he begins to take an interest in her jas something that either belongs |to him or something he would like to possess. A place on a pedestal is very dif-| fienlt to maintain, and I sometimes |think that many a wife grows tired {eee Sener” SP there Wate betas paid utter reverence and a cold kind of worship, and fs glad and eager to waltz away with a man who will call her “a ridiculous creature” in one breath, but kisses her while he laughs at her antics I think this fs the great trouble with Ellene Symone; she began by trying to live up to Harry's ideal | of an angel, too fair and frail for| the cold winds of the world to blow upon, and when she became this fragile creature of ice and snow Harry found out that {t was not the kind of a companion he wanted at all. Then, instead of owning up and coming to an understanding with Eliene, Harry promptly hied himself to flowery fields and pas- tures new, leaving poor Eliene, very cold and very miserable, shiv- ering on her poor little pedestal with no worshiper at all to bear us as always strong, but always| ination can Concelye and @s cruel | j | | her company. | j It was interesting to watch Zieanor Fatrlow’s face while the talk that made me come to the foregoing conclusion was going around the table. Sometimes she looked from me to Dick with a glance that sald: “I don’t believe you would ever wor | ship when you might love me.” And once I seemed to catch in Dick's intereste! eyes a gleam which told me that, for an instant! he would like to demonstrate if she were right | Harry Symone kept asking me the most pointed questions and| monopolized me to such an extent that I grew very uncomfortable for fear Ellene would think I was more |than usually tnterested in him. What a complex thing life is—we want, and want, and want for jthings, and then when some won |derful day they come to us we don't | want them any more (To Be Continued Monday) Rev. M. A. Matthews will preach a sermon Sunday morning entitled, | | Miller THE STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 4, CROWD SEES PETE SCHNEIDER IN GALLANT EFFORT TO TAME CHICAGO GIANTS; CLOSE SCORE FULLERTON GIVES LINE ONPHENOMS By Hugh S. Fullerton | HE Seattle Gfants|to stretch the second one into a MEMPHIS, Tenn, April 4.—Hav had thetr first set-|double and was thereupon executed ing given the majority of the teams | to with the Amert-|by a very nifty throw from Barbe of the American, National and Fed-| can Giants, from | to Monre eral leagues the once and twice} Chicago, yesterday 18 «are g#ntisfied that Pete over, it strikes me that this apring| afternoon, and gave| Schneider will be among the star has been surprisingly productive their dusky adver-|of the Northwestern league piteh of new matert eball saries m real tussle,|ers this season, Pete had some America bas been raked as nev When Umpire King | thing on ¢ 1, and kept the er before for talent--and a lot of| Kelley waved the| brunettes ¢ which way the new stars are twinkling right now, | fase batter out, the negroes Ww ball would ! In five of the I have seen more excellent young | possession of the long end of a 2 nine innings th isitors swur players tn the present tour of the|score, A bumper crowd turt frantically without result South than I ever have seen be-| The tle score which resulted when | 6% fore. Cadman scored James on & smash-| HER conditions Von Kolnitz the Best The bert youngest 1 think, ts Karl Von Kolnits, the |the colored warriors gleaned the vic self behind the young catcher picked up by Cinetn-|torfous tally following Duddy's boot clouds, and a pale natl {and a bad throw by Killilay, Dud gray light hung over Colling, with the Boston Nation-|dy's error and a couple of poor head, Two hurlers als, would be my second choice of | throws by Killilay marred what oth more suitable than young stars |orwise would have been a game Williams and} Likes Bill Jame jelean from bad features Schneider could not Stallings has more good material at ite have been picked. Williams t# the} than any of the others. He has| HB combat with the| pest pitching bet “Rube” Foster Fred Tylor, a likely-tooking catch Giants —_—turnisbed | hag in his tolls, The big, dark-com er, and Dugey from Waco, and| Manager Tealy an4|ptexioned moundaman holds a no- James from Seattle, all good major) his cohorts their/nit, no-run victory over the Port league matertal | first real workout |jand Colts, and only recently put a Hughie Jennings seems to have | ) of the pre-season |crimp in the Philadelphia Nation stumbled upon a covey of good) / schedule, and offer: | aig 3 youngsters. Kavanaugh and Fite: | A ed the fans a chance Pe as simmons, Spokane infielders, are| Ae > to get a line on Tea. | ANS packed the rare discoveries, and Compton 1s ly’s material. No: stands, It probably Ukely to show a lot tleeable among this was the appar bv was the bigg st | ent weakness at the bat displayed we crowd which has |by the outfield, Swain was unable} [< been in attendance NEFF IMPROVING; jto don a glove, owing to recent] at a game played in| SCORES KNOCKOUT SAN FRANCISCO, April 4 t Neff, a featherweight box hailing from Seattle, has a large following today as a result of putting Fred Wharton out tn the sixth round of their bout here Inst night. The Seattle boy seem: to have !mproved b form shown tn bis in this city d Neff in the 7 bat the latter was on his feet again tn an inetant, and after that period the fight was all bis BEES ARE SOLD VICTORIA, B. C., April 4 Humber, weal brick manufac turer, has successfully negotiated for the purchase of the Victoria Northwestern league club. 4 over SELL CADREAU | VANCOUVER, April Cadreau, an Indian pitcher who for. merly was the by Vancouver to Saskatoon. of the spring, | broken until the ninth inning, when | Rose Chief sensation of the | Northwestern league, has been sold For the BEST in Traveling Goods RIGHT PRICE see us REPAIRING Phone Elliott 1168, at the Goods Co. 90$ SECOND AVE. $04 Virginia ®t, near Westlake Ay Phone Elliott 80a “The Communion Cove- nant.” His sermon Sunday will discuss the subject, “Commercialism With- out a Conscience Is a Crime.” Everyone evening cordially invited First Presbyterian Church Seventh and Spring. Modern, elegantly rooma, with b 1 furnished money. Translents, Se to entently loca " Trunk & Leather THE VIRGINUS HOTEL}! outside | asked a kid what was going on in- accommodations tn nliness, comfort and courtesy for the WHITE HOUSE BILLIARD PARLORS a Green Bidg. Fourth and Pike Jo | | elas eS Oae 2 The House That Quality Built 1914, in th nd was not noc ing single jaickness, and Brown, Killilay and | Martin! comprised the fly-chasing sidering the out brigade. None of the outfielders come of the open- hit. Roy Brown, who until yester-. ing battle, and with |day gave much promise with the! prospects of favorable weather, jstick, fanned each time he wielded jthe club. Martini and Killilay i Du 8. twice retired on strikes. . UDDY, who was al strong hitter in the Union association last year, and who has swung the war club with good re sults against the semt-pro teams tak en on by the Tealy. wi TM aL million giant the visitors. receive for Seattle. re Ideal for speed sun removed St the new park, Con- ug has visions of hanging out the RO. sign today and Sunday. . . iser Dell, who blew up like a crackers last yea! 1] assume mound duties for t Ika this afternoon. Lindsay, an | other star on the Giants’ pitching | staff, is the twirling probability for | Hubn probably will The New Indian Models Our store is a miniature motor- cycle exposition. You will enjoy looking over the mechanical per- fections of the beautiful red IMOTOCYCLES ' FOR 1914 Come in. Get a copy of the 1914 Indian Catalog pronounced by ex to be the last word in motorcycle litera- ture. Avail yourself of an Indian demonstration. Handle the Indian Electric Equipment your self—see how efficient it is—how simply it is operated. Learn why Indian machines for 1914 establish a new standard in motorcycle values. < ces range from $215 to $340 f. 0. b. Beattie, Seven models, aise aanvecy. ton and side car attachments. Immediate delt» eries on all models. Bargains in used and rebuflt machines. Ask us sbout our easy payment plan. Special Tet Machine oh at $215 BALLOU & WRIGHT Portiand Store, Seat Store, BROAWWAY AT OAK. 817 EAST PIKE. Phone your WANT AD to | kums, fafled to dis ABR HPO A E | |timguieh himself as . stugner He Pe eee oe ALLEN KEEPS IT MAIN epee a a: to- fanned twice, boosted a fly to neo 406 3 6 4) 4 morrow today will yes and and died once on a grounder ee us is test Se . ~ : #4 terday, Bobby James, Raymond and Cad ‘ ¢ 8 43) BAe | Se aren y: man performed with the “big stick” H 3") ¢ ¢|festing Edward Ralph in the final to the decided advantage of the 2 2 4 1 6{block of their 600-point match elubd Manager Tealy Raymond . ® * * *lhore last night, 200 to 79, Bennie ion gal the ty on = bd Totals 3 7 31 1s 2|Allen, successfully defended his |his four trips to the plate, when he| Am Gianie— AM R HPO. A B “ket-billi siedien: laced ‘out a single on each occasion. |Gans it H BS Fe Ber | bi ath okt om etdinisamtbcon oy Big Joe Williams, the Giants’ pitch- |W cf oy ‘ > Thats er, did his mightiest to check Tea-|Licyd, eo ‘ 2.9. 354 ips batting. bee, with the result |Marver. rt : ek o| PLAY CRICKET That Seattle has the finest that on little Napoleon's third ad-|hooxer. « 3 | he Ee | | frame oa in the world? vent to the plate he succumbed on | Monroe, ab i OS is —_—_ | ome in and see, strikes. Williams, * © oe 2 ©| With the addition of several new ee lear eel $ * © © ®lerack players to the club’s mem-/| | OBRY JAMES hit the! — rote 2 4 21 6 @|bership, the Seattle Cricket cub|| BROWN & HULEN et ae mone 0 | ,.ceere be, tania ° hopes to put a strong team into the '| second and Spring Third Floor 1e a ° which was sufficient | “Two-tase hit--iloyd: "enor field this summer. to show that his eye | Barber: stolen, basse Raymon — ——S im in good trim. Cad. | 4 Wriitama umpire—King Kelly man biffed two of the balls which shot | from Willams’ arm |th for hits. He tried | team. Ba MS '* wane ilies om | Why the prominence given | | the statement that Wisconsin | may not row at Poughkeepsie this year? As we recall, Wis- consin never did row at Pough- | keepste. | BY | | FREDDIE , : Gs NOT 80 YOU COULD NOTICE jit! ONE RAINY DAY JOE TINKER’S | Feds were practicing in the Colise- lum. A portly looking gentleman | ru th sp 1 answered Tinker's bunch playing in side ball.” * 8c Philadelphia and New York are after the Army-Navy footbal! game. Gee, they are selfish! All they want series and everything °" in ‘ ART WILSON ET AL. | There are flowers that bloom in the | spring, tral-l There are flowers that bloom in the fall. | But there are hundreds of prize- fightin’ kids, tra Who never bioom at all, amateur, cleared 6 feet 2% inches, cine, Wis., April 10; lightweighters. TION ARE WI | ster, | Angeles 2, Oakland 1; an 100 men are out for the track ‘ A DIP INTO THE PAST February 14, 1891, G. R. Fearing, nning high jump, Boston, Mass, A GLIMPSE AHEAD Joe Mandot-Matty McCue at Ra- rn FABLE Noah kicked the hound dog across cabin of the ark | Say,” he remarked, gazing out of | port hole, “this reminds me of a\ ring training trip.” OUR OLD FR DS, MIDSEA.- IN FORM AND PINK OF CONDI.| H US AGAIN, | | | EDDIF O'KHE weight, outpointe six rounds. a, veteran feath-| 4 Harry Diamond | Diamond is a young: A diamond in the rough? San Francisco 4, Venice 0; Los Portland 6, 3 THIS MAN COPELAND SEEMS | |to be a very truthful person! He opines that he won't win the next Olympic games with the Austrian team he {s training, YALE BASEBALL AND TRACK athletes have started training on Yale field, at New Haven. More } | | | Sacramento 0. | | \ Dr. H. W. Valentine Graduate Surgeon-Chiropodist 712 Northern Bank Bldg. Phone Elliott 3250 TRYING YO VIN DER FRET SH-H! — my DOG "FRITZIE* ies DER BENCH SHOW. You ARE Der DOG JUDGE . HERE 165 A BOX PRIZE IN s ss. Expert Medical Service On the Strictly “Class A” Business Basis of “Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded” Our “Money back tf not satisfied” Gepartment of medical service should not be overlooked In this Gepertment we make a unt- form charge of One Dollar, paid cash down, for each visit, and any medicine that is after which if the he or she come and get y may their dollar refunded sultation ts given free to those ing Osteopathic, Chiropractic or other drugioss tr ring special mi the only office in mbination of all DR. MACY s Ten Years Constant Practices, combin { In all methods ts the only rational way and the most feas- Idle for those who are really in eernest about getting well and do not wish to waste the time, and often the only chance one has to get well, in trying out the many different methods, one at a time tained, DR. MACY CURES | xriino'Sar uth data cttod ton Chron A many so-called In- | distress to me for years and ae grow older it seemed to get a tighter Asthma, Appendicit rip upon me, in Deafness, Goltre, Corad ment I noers, Weak Lung Dropstca Dr. Macy for t ‘and Anaemio Condi- | At that tam, ous Disor- | bad that T could not walk a slow " Stomach and Intes- | waik for 100 yards without stopping tinal Disorders, Kidney, Liver, | to get my breath and resting. My Bladder and ail Urinary Disorders, | limbs were swollen badly, and Disorders of the Skin and Blood, bd etreulation so poor that my body was of a bluish hue Three months’ treatment from Dr. Macy completely relieved me. I have not had another attack, and although I am 50 years of aga, I believe I can now do as much work in ay, and do it as Ecroma, Acne, Pimples, Rupture, Piles and all rectal troubles, with. out the knife, My treatment for all | weaksesses, Despondency, Impaired | Vitality and Nervous Debility never | Women—Irroguiari- | easy, as at any time in my younger |, dixpinceme: days. A. D. MoPHERSON, nd Bridge Foreman, N. P. RR, roomy bi weaknesses |DR. MACY, Specialist Hours, 10 a m. In Advanced Methods, 302-8-4 Globe 10 to Bik,, Madison and Ist, Seattle, Wash. CUT THIS ADVERTISEMENT OUT FOR FUTURE REFERENCR. KLEIN'S SHOE HOSPITAL, 613-204 Ay. to or write,

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