Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
) BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS ; (Paris Correspondent of the United Press.) . PARIS, June 18—For the first time since Jack Johnson, the black giant, lald stalwart Jim Jeffries on the pugilistic shelf at Reno, and, unscratched, took possession of the heavyweight cham plonship belt, the coveted trophy will be put into play here Satur day night, June 27, at the Velodrome d’Hiver, Frank Moran of Pittaburg, U. 8. A. will be the big dusky’s opponent, and from out on the banks of the Clee, at Butry-on-the-Beach, where the White Hope Is training, comes word that he Is in great shape. Similar STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1914. STRANGE SIGHTS WHEN JACK JOHNSON MEETS MORAN;| FIGHT WILL RESEMBLE A GRAND OPERA PERFORMANCE reports are filtering out of the Johnson camp, in Asnieres. Unlike Christmas, Frenchmen figure, heavyweight champion ship fights don't come once a year, and, by close shaving on other expenses, diminishing the dally ration of absinthe, and holding down on the annual tip to the family concierge, the necessary 275 france, or $55, demanded for a ringside pocket without causing fatal convulsion: taps for the first round, at When the bell at, can be torn from the 10:30 p, m., the sight which will greet the spectator’s eye would render speech less the thousands of Amerioan lovers of the manly art who have Seattle Hi Coaches Will Retain Jobs There is little probability that any changes wii! be made the opening of the fall term Im the coaches for Seattle’ There will be no more intercity high schools. games of any kind In King county, | This appeared evident today this being the effect of a ruling re when Superintendent of cently agre upon by members of} the school board, in view of trouble | which has frequently occurred on Schools Frank B. Cooper gave out the information that each one of the six coaches had the occasion of a Seattle team’s ap been reemployed for the fall pearance in Tacoma. term. The order went into effect last This does not mean that each ts|#¢ason, but was not enforced. A number of schoola had already necessarily retained to handle ath letics, as the reappointment has to do only with teaching in the school On the face of this, however, it is quite likely the same coaches will drawn up their playing schedule Next year will be the first season }the schools have been unable to compete against outside teams, | supervise next year, as it is seldom| This means that Seattle wil! no/ @ coach is held over unless he is|!onger be a factor in the state wanted to continue the tutelage of| championship fights. the athletes. The names of tained, and whether there will be the coaches re- any changes will be withheld until | | | | SCORES AND STANDINGS || The Seattle Giants turned on the! ; Bengals and trounced Iron Man MecGinnity’s crew at Tacoma yes-| terday, 5 to 4. Dell relieved Gipe| in the third. Seattle Milie, if ; STEWART HOUSE 86 Stewart At. Near Fike Public Modern single rooms 25¢ modern outside rooms, for 1 fi/ or 3, 5O¢ > 3 2 KH PO, : °> : Killtiey, of 1 1 t e Jamen to he Cadman, ec’. + SAE a AS | Swain tt... eae Ge Muhn, Ib ... . 1 ‘ 1 ee ae a | ee Be ie ee ° ° 1 e = o. 2 u ' ARR i O a & Miliion, it . ‘ , 1 1 . ° ccs See BS Menutiin, 36 ap ae ‘i i Boeckel. "tb ie OE ae aN ae is economical in hot || X«iersors +r e408. 88 Butler ae cescvee 8 2 2 ob 8 8 FY irooks, ib ee ' . eu i e weather, because it saves ce ip Sie Sa ie ae tae i : o . o o v more than it costs. : Tah fa Ae vat See Eh Be We cover Seattle. Our com- See ae See Sey eee plete delivery system guaran- a) | ‘Totals *Batted for Hines tn seventh. srBatted for Andrade im ninth ore tees you ice during the coming hot weather. Just telephone. en ICEDE VERY CO. —— 02200010 0-6 ooe2 20 & a Tune, 5 Nite off Hines in 7 tnntngs. ‘on balle—Gipe 2, Dell 3, Hines 3, Andra dat “NATIONAL LEAGUE | > AMERICAN LEAGUE Lost | Philadelphia . CAFE Com. Monday, June 15 DOLLY | Washington |e toute BOWMAN Jie2"% | Baltimore ai |onicago 2 | uttalo HH \ High-Class Act | Brooktyn FA Direct From Chicago Kansse Oty uM o 9 Other Entertainers J Including MARACCI’S BAND We Lead—Others Follow Low Angeles San Francisco . Portland f Bacramento | Oakland $39] 492] 9 IN OTHER LEAGuEs \o 0: SEATTLE BUSINESS [p37 DIRECTORY 1 Select from the Goods of the Fol- June 22, Edna Bomar ¢ June 29, Miss Le Rand 2 AMERICAN Philade)phia at. Loui x York 4 Chicago 3-3; New York 5. Philadelphia 6, St. Louis 4 Baltimore 2, Kaneas City Pittsburg 1; Indianapolis Brooklyn %, &t. Louts 1 COA! Portiand 3-5;{ lowing Merchantse—They Are eo 6; Venice 5.) Thoroughly Reliable and Lee An Se s Solicit Your Patronage. pene AD TO MOUNTAINS; EX-CHAMP TRAINS| LOS ANGELES, June 18.—For- mer Lightweight Champion Ad Wolgast was preparing today for a trip to Wheeler Springs to spend |a week in the mountains before taking up the gymnasium work that will put the finishing touches on his training for his bout with Joe Rivers at Vernon July 4 Awnings and Sleeping Porches to order. Estimates furnished free. Pennants and Cernival Supplies. Linquist & Lund, Inc. 1104 Third Avenue. Phone Elliott 5340. I isle RESTAURANTS | German Delicatessen Shop f C. F. Baasch ) CAFES The Me ai penn KE) FUNERAL DIRECTORS SACREDNESS We shall not mar the sacredne humiliate you or belit our pro fession by bidding for the burtai or cremation of your loved ones, Let us know your wishes and they wilt be complied with, BUTTERWORTH & SONS MORTICIANS 1921 FIRST AVENUE CCa’ rat Av st i. pl Nation, HE pitching of Bill James, the Seattle boy, this year, Is all to the candy. Man ager George Stallings turned husky Willlam on the Chicago Cubs yesterday afternoon, and Bill fairly kicked the tar out of the Chicagoans. The Cubs picked off eight hits, but the biffing was done, usually, at the wrong moment, for the beat they could do was three runs. Boston plied up eight tallies. Bert Whaling caught Bill, and besides making the Cubs em- brace the sacks, slapped out a timely single. Les Mann, third of the former Seattle players with Boston, poled out a couple of safeties, one of them being a three-base slam. These three boys are tainly shining. corn Who was walting for us at the door thie morning but young Mr. Kid Alibi. “1 didn't get the opportunity to work a single game of my own all the time | wi with Boston, or when | was with Polo Fever came to the United Stat: | Brit! hi si 27, The Spaniards are great polo ayers and will be after the inter title next ir. The leading poto spirit in Spain the Duke of Penaranda, who with the hn The duke Is a fine polo player meaeif and has been a great as- stance to the English quartet. ‘ISEATTLE BOATS TO GO ON CRUISE SOON Members of the Seattle Ya jub are finishing preparations fe cruise to Port Townsend on June ,» Where a party of yachtsmen bt from Victoria will be met. A pro- gram of races probably will be held. This will be the first event Pet se| Of its kind held on Puget $47| this season sound I CURE @ A Cure Is What 7 You Want ATION FREE URED IN v 914 oF 406 for Blood Disorders. My offices are entirely private I confine my etice to chronic and nervous on of men and women, such as chronic ailments of the L ER, STOMACH, BOWE KIDNEYS, BLADDER, 8 BLOOD, PILES, VARICOS VEINS, UL Ss, n TRICKS + ‘SEATTLE PL | Rochester and Jersey City this pring,” says Wynn Noyes, the pitcher who has returned to the Spokane Indians. “You know how lam. | have to have work. This business of sitting on the bench day after day gets on my nerves. I'm glad to get back to Spokane, too, for | like the town and the league.” see Judge McCredie tried to wish @ pitcher named Hanson on the Spokane Indians, but he got a curt “Nothih’ doin’ ” from Man ager Mike. Mike has pitchers galore now, and he's pretty shy on grabbing every piece of base. ball talent that looms up. The judge might have fooled Lynch into taking Hanson, but Mike got some Inside inforthation re- garding the hurler. . ee “Pop” Artlett, who comes to this league as a member of the Spokane team, having been transferred by San Francisco, brings along with him a grand pitching average of .000. Three gobs of compressed atmosphere —count ‘em. This is his record diddings PAGE 7. sat, shirt-sleeved, at Reno, Jacksonville, New Orleans and else where. Beautiful women, in daring evening clothes and diamond tiaras, will be sitting by the score at the sides of pompous, mon ocled gentiemen of the same stripe, bedecked In garments seen only at galas, at the opera and official receptions in less cere monious lands. Not that this fight will be any different In this respect from given in the last official Coast gue percentage table, show Ing that Artiett has pitched only one game and lost Lawrence Allen, captain of the freshman crew at the uni versity, and who will be a can didate for a place in the regular boat next season, looks for the Varsity to cop the Poughkeep sie regatta. “1 had a letter from Conibear the other day,” said, “and he tells me that Titus, once a national sculls champion, picks Washington to finish recond, and that Titus told Conibear the Western crew is fully 20 per cent stronger than the one which finished third in the 1913 regatta to Syracuse and Cornell. He says that Titus figures Cornell the best, but still gives Washington a chance.” Coach he oe The Seattle fan is grabbing the sport extra each afternoon with nervous excitement. The firet bit of news sought Ie the of the Cincinnatl | RANDOM SHOTS | NOW Boys, BEFORE I START seLUNG PRETZELS 1 Vili DO AFEW CLEVER CART AHEM! } at the top, and kic ONE COLOR-BLIND BASEBALL REPORTER ANNOUNC Chief Johnson is in the pink. . 08 THAT > Judging from attendance figures at the Cubs’ park, in Chicago, most | of the fans quit when Murphy did. | ca YEH, MAYBE THAT'S IT Perhaps the Cincinnati Garry Hermann and the strong point of his team. . . We are a queer race. HANK O'DAY SAYS THE cinnat! still is pursuing him. Y Reds are disprove his statement | Many a man will give a woman his | the lifeboat who wouldn't think of doing it in a street car. JINX double-cross Johnson was merely trying to that Chief THAT CROWNED HIM AT CIN Ongri, the same kind of a jinx. BY THE WAY, iS EUJINX THE FEMININE OF JINX? ee ee THOSE ATI 10S ARE cause they are playing such p MR be preparing to have John Me THE GOVERNOR OF VIRGINIA we ed bookmake didn't give t s if they Id quit ODD FOLKS ing the bats and gloves around the club house be yor ball gambling and go to work; HERE THEY ARE KOMMERS, WHO KICKED AN UMP IN THE SLATS, MAY aw tr . ¥ to tempt him to jump “ PARDONED THOSE CONVICT- but he Chick Evans’ admission that the American golfers did not cover themselves with glory while abroad confirms some of our mild sus- picions. ar THEY WANT TO meets, BAR TH HAMMER THROW IN TRACK That will do away with a lot of knocking, eee STICK OUT YOUR HANDS in an aeroplane isn’t so much. Looping the It doesn't hurt any more to fall 5,000 feet head first than feet first . Gt At ONE SPECTATOR, LISTENING TO THE UTTER OF THE racing machines during the Indianapolis race, remarked: “Sounds like a baseball club eating soup.” NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Won. Lost. 4 19 a 23 es 98 25 . 23 38 24 a 19 42 eee RALPH DE PALMA Now Ralph is some auto driver, And he is in love with the game. spins speed. To him this racing looks tame. ee Pet Vancouver Seattle Spokane Portland Tacoma Victoria 644 603 364 31 He around at terrific terday’s Results Tacoma 4 Portland 1 Victoria 0 ‘Horr After Them 1,—| 18 scheduled to go | plac ‘6 during the EB) POUGHK Ralph Horr, the Unive making an effort crews, which SEP! June to get the compete ttle next y 698 377 graduate manager of ty of Washington, 1s} five against | showing Harvard's Goat In posses. Washington here Saturday, come to} sion of two “Yale SEATTLE BOXER PREDICTS A WIN FOR CHICAGOAN Ray Campbell, the local light welght, saye Jack White is going to have a lead pipe cinch when he tangles with Stanley Yoakum, the Denverite, in Denver next month Campbell ought to know, for bh battied Yoakum over the 12-round route recently and all but won ‘Yoakum is a rough-he fight the Seattle boy declared, “He is after the Romeo Hagen style, jusing bis strength to wear his op. ponent down. 1 should have got | ten the decision, but he was a home boy and popular, He is not clever and his punch {s light.” The White-Yoakum fight, which 2 rounds, takes ks’ convention A Chicago paper prints a picture co-eds.” New UP | | t in| any other half-way good exhibition here which has gone before. Boxe” is simply the latest fad of the fast and fashionable rich set. AYERS ON A RAMPAGE Two [Local Boxers EX-GIANTS STAR IN MAJOR LEAGUE Matched in Canada ~ Reds. The reason thereof is the presence of one Pete Schneider, late of Seattle, Wash,, who was shipped off to the Herzog outfit a couple of weeks ago. Pete hasn't bust ed into box score yet, but fans expect to pick up the paper any day now and see where young Peter has distinguished himself as a major leaguer Phil Douglas, with Spokane last season, worked for the Reds yesterday and was bumped, 2 to 1, by Brooklyn. He allowed four hits. ar tees Chet Mcintyre, who, not very long ago, was promoting box ing shows in Vancouver, B. C., and who afterward hopped into the ring himself when he saw a lot of ducks cleaning up a bunch of easy kale, has issued an open challenge to any light heavyweight in the world. Mcintyre is in communication with the Brighouse, B. C., peo- ple In regard to bringing Jim Flynn to the Northwest to box him, Flynn wants a big wad for coming, so Mcintyre’s prop- osition may fall flat. “M” Runner Big Winner Barancik Barancik, the University of Chi- ago sprinter, has been one of the sensations of Western track event! this season. His points enabled the Maroons to win the Missouri Valley Conference meet. He was second to his teammate, Knight, in the , |100-yard, and in the 220-yard he won, smashing the conference rec- ord by one-fifth of a second, run-| ning in 214-5 seconds. JOHNSON IS SORE; DEFIES FEDERALS CHICAGO, June 18.—"1 will see to it that no player who j er how big a star h ver play in organ ized baseball again This efi today of r J ident of the in re sident reck the | leagues ffers of all who wanted to de. « of two Chicago White Sox piayers—Hal Chi und Ray Demmitt—by the Buffalo Is was imme diately respo: for the ex change of compliments MANCHESTER, N. J., June 18 Learning that a number of Chicago White Sox players were contem-| plating a jump to the Feds, Harry Lord, former ptain, said would go along with them S PILLS Most pop : he There will be celebrities present. In America these are usually shining lights of the sporting world. A few of those will be at the ringside here on that Saturday. But the stars among the spectators will be Maurice Maeterlinck, the great Belgian phil- osopher and poet, author of the “Blue Bird,” “Mary Magdalen” and 4 Sister Beatrice’; Auguste Bodoin, the world’s most noted sculp- tor; Henry Bernstein and Henri Bataille, the playwrights; Jean Richopin, the Academie Francaise poet; painters, senators, mem- bers of the chamber of deputies, not to mention certain of Europe's most dashing dukes, duchesses, princes and others of noble blood. FRENCHIE VAISE vs. JOHNNY O'LEARY, JULY 1 | CHET NEFF vs. ROUGH HOUSE CHARLEY \ URNS, JULY 1, ery follower f the boxing|Columbia, and a monster holiday game in the Pacific Northwest is Crowd is expected to turn out, The : “ ghtweight championship of Cam joking forward to these tWOlada now held by the Frenchman bouts, which will fought near|{g at stake. Vancouver, B. C., next month. Se Prince Rupert Gets Other ttle fans are especially interested ff and Burns settle the ques in the outcome of the battles, a f thelr supremacy at Prince O'Leary and Neff are both Seattle t. Prince Rupert promoters boys and Frenchie Vai m de an attempt to match Valse his h only a short distance;and Burns, but the plan fell from this elty, and on numer-| through when Vaise signed articles |ous occasions performed before| with O'Leary, Burns is a clever local audiences fighter, who has a good record, Vaise Fight at Brighouse It is probable that special trams. The Vaise-O'L« fight will be| portation arrangements will be fought at the Brighou aren made between Seattle and Vane” fe miles from 1couver, on|\couver for the O'Leary-Vaise fight, @ July 1 as a-big crowd is expected from 7 This is Dominion in British! this city Postpone a Game © The Queen Anne Christians | evened up the series with the First Christians for the Church league champlonship, winning yesterday, 14 to 8 The third and deciding game has been postponed, owing to the accidental drowning of C. W. Leader, one of the First Christian players. GOLF TEAM DUE HERE TOMORROW FOR BiG MATCH A flock of men and women golf players from Victoria will arrive in Seattle Friday morning for the {n rnational team matches on the attle Golf club links the day fol- lowing. The majority of these playe main over for the Pa eifie Ne #t championships, the] qualifying rounds of which start] Monday. | The feature event of the program Saturday is the team match be tween an aggregation of Victoria and Seattle players. Elght players represent h city The British team carried away} the international match last sea-/ son, defeating a pick team of} players from this state handily. A trophy is at stake and the team} winning it three times retains it permanently Seattle Man Ties | SPOKA June 18.—Leslie| Reid of Seattle: has tied Frank| Reth! of Tacoma for high profes sional honors in the annual North- west tournament here. Each scored 145 yesterday | LOS ANC AN AIRS: V MUST BE UP IN LICE WANT CLE P. THE * CHIEF OF ro HE AIR. 8. 8. “PRINCESS ALICE” To Skagway, calling at Alert Bay, Prince Rupert, Ketchikan, Wran- gell and Juneau, The splendid “Princess” steamers offer every comfort, “Princess May” June 13, “Princess Sophia” June 20, July 4, 18 and August 1. Special sailings of the magnificent steamer “Princess Alice” June 27, July 11, 25 and August 8, AN IDEAL VACATION TRIP For rates, sailings and information apply to CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY 713 Second Avenue, Seattle. HA, HA, DOTS RIGHT Boys, KEEP ON BUYING! FRITZIE VILL PERFORM WHILE You ARE BUYING!