The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1914, Page 7

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STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 7, 1914. PAGE 7. TES sLump| | USE THEIR) | A A Y UT OUTLAWS ampbell Meets Shannon Tonight in 15-Round Go ball.” | players. BRS THINK enue players are loyal, 80 | Federal league offers are alwa track, Vancouver, open next Satur. day afternoon. Twenty-two thousand a boxing show at Fraser Mills, | dollars in purses will be distributed B. C., tonight. They are Ray Camp-|to the horsemen during the open bell and Eddie Shannon, who meet/ing week of the meeting, which in @ 1Srounder, The boys fwill| will continue throughout the sum Jump through the ropes at catch | mer. ot a purse less than $300 ts weights, which gives Campbell the | offered during the first week : Two Seattle boys are going to furnish t At in tertainment advantage. Eddie Shannon was a *-. bang-up fighter around Seattle! While the contestants in the 20. when he took care of himself, and/round championship fight in Lon the two ought to furnish the Ca-/don tonight are scheduled as Wille | muck fans with excitement| Ritchie and Freddie Welsh, the aplenty. principals are, in reality, Geary mo | Steffen and Frederick Hall Thom. Following hie mateh with Henry/as. Ritchie and Welsh merely are |thetr fighting names, and by these names they always will be known. Welsh {s five years older than his American antagonist. Ritchie ts 23. ee Ordemann at Rock Island July 10, Doe Roller, Seattle surgeon-crap pler, will come to the Northwest for a tussle with Pat Connolly, the British Columbia wrestler, at the Avenue theatre, Vancouver, B, C Connolly started training for the bout yesterday . Johnny Rawlings, the youngster who performed at the keystone sack for the Victoria Rees last sea bd son, may get a regular job on the The horse races on the Minory Cincinnati t esult of Fed . ————- /eral league en made to Third Baseman Niehoff, of the Reds. Niehoff has long threatened }to Jump, and Manager Herzog now finds that he ts losing interest tn his work. He is talking of shov ing Johnny in Niehoff's place. Aer) Quick Dealings are the Life of Business In every business—in your business—the time comes when cash must be quickly raised to meet a pressing need A real estate asset will not serve the purpose for an emergency loan if the title must first be exam- ined from an Abstract Welser Dell is lamenting the fact that the old Harrison avenue ball park in Butte is being ripped down It was on this same lot that Welser twirled a no-hit game against Og den, and where he established the Union association strikeout record of 14. Joe Bush, now with Connie Mack, also pitched some good games on the same battle ground Johnny Wolff, the Rainier, Ore., motorboat enthusiast, thinks his | racer, the 26-foot Oregon Wolff IV ean run rings around Capt. Smith's Oregon Kid Il. Johnny says this after taking one juicy walloping from “Cap” Smith's boat tn the re- cent races at Astoria. According to Wolff, the sun got in his pilot's eyes and stayed there until the Kid scooted across the line abead SCORES AND STANDINGS from the beginning, and = dlls Jag wey ee be subjected to possible 2 Sb eh ae objections. Ee fs Se Oe 1 : : . J ° 1 ° ‘ 1 @ 213 6 6 e 1 J ' ? emand $5583 1 17 37 10 8 R. M PO. 4 ] e eerie | 6 aes | Witheott, i¢ r) 2 i e 1 Lamb, 3> 1 ’ 1 2 1 | Kelly. ib ° a ry i 1 Seasion, se : i 1 ’ e Hoffman, ¢ 1 i ' : 1 Smith, p . ° o 40 Totau 7 when you buy, and you sy EC 8 ; *Mitie out! will have our standard, tel guaranteed examination of the title that will be ac- cepted at face value by all leading financial in- stitutions in this commu- nity. Your real estate will then be the ideal se- curity for a quick loan. Three-dase hits in. Sacrifice hit Kilitiay, Mille, Swain. 1, Mellenry 2 2, Me ay an > aye | mond to Muhn; Nye to Kelly to Hoftm: Nye to Scanic Pitchers’ summary hite and 7 runs off Gipe in @ bite and 0 runs off Ke and § runs off Molt 4 5 rune off Smith in vietory to Gipe; Washington ime ae ‘ ind a onan enaea ¢ Title * CremicAN Phiiadeiphia 2, New | Tork 0: Wai Poston | NATIONA! | phia 4-7; Boston 3-1, FEI Pittebure Baltimore 6; ington Insurance Company Chicago 1 COAST——No games scheduled “AMERICAN Lead ‘ Pet. Philadetphte Ar NO ABSTRACT fae REQUIRED. 3348 and “ 62 NATIONAL LEAGUE t Dr. Macy Cure You All Chronic and Many So-Called Incurable Disorders—The Bye, Kar, Nose, Throat, }. Kidney, Liver, Bladder and all Ty Disorders, Disonses of t Acne, Eezema, Pimples. Rupture, ‘and all rectal troubles without the knife. qi en of Painful Periods, Displacements and Gisorders peculiar to the sex without tesorting to surgery All Disorders of Men—Nervous Debiiity Blood P all Special and Chronic Disorders My treatment for Des Vitality and Nerv son, dency, Impaired Debility never ra, 10 & m. 10 to 12. Consultation tree. to 8 p.m. Sundays, ‘Ton years’ practice My success 1 due to the use of a4 vanced methods of every school, and tell ie you exactly what your treatment will by free examination, and by work t you can afford to pay fee when { 4 of any of there treatm and y bea gure. Call or write DR. MACY, Specialist 4 Advanced Methods for All Diseases ; af out now tor rateronce. | Blk. Madison and First, Seattle, Wash. “Thoughts of money are Interfering with thelr thoughts of base. That's the way Barney Dreyfus accounts for the slump of his Pirate far as | can learn, ya on their minds.” By Hugh S. Fullerton (Relow appeare the reoond the series of “minute” of “Five tn leading writer of sport May 30, Decoration day, 1912. The greatest crowd that ever had assembled in Indianapolis was banked fn the great stands, massed | jon the infield, jammed around the} watohing the struggle of the steeds of tron and nerves of steel for the gyeatest prize in the auto- mobile world | Accidents, crashes, death and tn. jJury had followed in the wake of the hurtling monsters that splut tered and roared around the two and a half miles of sloping speedway For five hours the strain had been intense; and then Ralph De Palma, driving his Mercedes, flashed to the lead and, running circles around the expiring racers, he sped toward victory | He had driven one of the gam-/ est races ever seen, in the fr of heart-breaking luck, and spurting he wore down the leaders and crawled ap and up until the reo ords commenced to fall. One by one he hurtled past Ahem, at a pace that dizzied the spectators, leaving a tral! of fire behind him. At the pits a sweating, eweartng, howling swarm of mechanicians doctored the cars that were worn | | pits, out In the chase of the intrepid Italian. Four cars lay wrecked and mangled, tossed aside, Oldfield was out of it—his car damaged be-| yond repair, Mile by mile the vic-| torfous De Palma bhurtled his way toward victory—and the $20,000/ prize. | At the 198th lap, De Palma was! leading—leading by more than two} miles—and only five miles to go.| As he swurg into the stretch to} come down toward the finish, the smoke was pouring from the en gine, which was coughing and spluttering. At the sound a score of experts leaped from the pits and gazed anxiously up the stre' De Palma was coming—congh-| ing, spluttering, he and hia mech aniclan fighting the engine. He was slowing up—and a score prang from the Mercedes pit to! He Won, All Right TACOMA, July fter going over the tally sheets with the race officials yesterday, Arthur Klein ts satisfied that Hughie Hughes won) a fair victory over him Friday. Klein has gone East. Corbett Is Here Jim (James J.) Corbett, once! world’s heavywelght boxing cham-/ pion, is in Seattle today on a 10- day visit. He read Hugh Fuller: | ton’s story of his fight with Jet-) fries in The Star, and enjoyed it immense, | ie | Dingley Rallies | TACOMA, July 7—Rert Dingtoy, the auto driver, hurt in the Monta-| marathon here on the Fourth, was making a gallant battle for lite to- day. His chances are good. Big ‘Match Today) Teal Williams and Lalzure won their matches in the Seattle Ten-| nis club tournament yesterday. | They pair off today | FEDERAL LEAGUE w Lost. Pet | Chicago ” : Indianapolis Laltimore . n Ruffalo ”» Brooklyn 2 ty » 6 DUGDALE FIELD | BASEBALL Tomorrow at 3:00 VICTORIA VS. SEATTLE Admission 25c, 50c, 750 and $1.00 Take Renton Cars | whe PORT Desperate, the Daring De Palma Got Out and Started to Push His ald the crippled racer. But he did hot stop. track, geaticulating wildly and one ran beside the car, screaming at Renning, desperately he waved | De Palma to know what the mat to them that the case was hope-|ter was; imploring him to stop. less. He knew that the engine! Leaning over and working frantic was dying and that, before it could ally, De Palma screamed a reply be repaired, he would be over-jand shot onward. taken, Three men ran tnto th Dawson, swinging. RANDOM SHOTS | WAR IN BASEBALL BRINGS) what if Cobb had brought a bat in-| strange things; half the fellows|stead of a gun? who wrote that Hal Chase was the a itied best in the world are now proving that Jacques Fournler has him beaten a mile. . Kansae wants to make the entire state a zone of quiet. At the re cent conference meet we failed bof | the -— —-¢e | CONUNDRUM | Hal Chase hid, leaped out of | the stand, rushed to bat, struck | | out, and was served with in- | Junction papers after the third | | strike. What is his Fed league | average? . . « Lefty Baumgartner, of the Uni- versity of Chicago, engaged In all | Sports excepting the high jump and |the high hurdles, so the Phillies | felt safe In signing him. ee see anything that would cause a Kansan to make any noise. eee THAT DETROIT BUTCHER really ought to have been thankful; JUST THINK; ter Johnson, now ried, promises friend wife to be jhome early, then what will he do jto the other club . | | MORAN OF THE BOSTON NOTICE CHANGE Hf) praves is careless about his spikes; oF ADDRESS he spiked Larry Doyle in the face, - pscoriya [Condition of the spikes not re- ported. eee ED HEEMAN, THE CHICAGO rooter, denies baseball had ahy- thing to do with his divorce case; if Mrs. Heeman could have stood for his fanning the real cause must have been something frightful. NORTHWESTERN || LEAGUE ON 906 for My offices are « confine my Pp chronic and nervou Blood Disorders. trely priva: | etice t | diseases . 7 dt ~ Lost. Pet. of enig_eiiments of’ the Seattle 30.647 X Vancouver . 31,631 e Spokane .... 31.622 Victoria 50.308 Portland 52.358 4 Liberty Haflding Postoffire, Seattle Tacoma 345 a Opposite every evening at 7:30 at the LEARN TO PLAY Anyone wishing to learn the game of Pocket Bil- liards will get a world of information by attendin; games played by experts every afternoon at 2:1 lors, in the Joshua Green Building, An academy with seating has been built to accommodate the public COME ADOLPH, I NEED You. DERE 1668 MONEY To BE MADE HERE AT COINEY ICELAND, gate for school children. dently the owners intend to stick until that generation grows up. ee the and White House Billiard Par- Fourth and Pike. apacity for 300 people Yesterday's Results Seattle 10, Victoria 7. Vancouver 4, Portland 3. Spokane 6, Tacoma 4. quickly. DON'T CRown! TAKE IT EASY, CHILDREN! DER HUMAN CREAM PUFE™ HE 186 HARMLESS | comes his own ‘ WHAT IF WAL- that he ts mar |, This Is the golden age for baseball doubts this can consult E. H. Woods. were shunned by all men. Woods officiated at Peoria, he made a decision at the home plate which| gave the visiting team the game and then ran for his life too quick, for a big crowd formed and gave chase n umpir $20,000 Slipped Through De Palma’s Fingers As Steel Steed Died Few Feet From Goal | Blazing Car Over the line stands, caught the situation and began to work frantically. Behind him Teddy Tetziaff came steam- ing along In his Fiat, and he se sail for the crippled leader, while Hughes, In his Mercer, nodded his grim blackened face, and spurred his speedster onward. He held the Indicator In the days| | shoulder again | as a victor. umpires, Any umpire wno| |UMPIRING TODAY A BED OF ROSES, SAYS OLD - TIMER WHO GOT CHASED CHAMP CALLS VAISE’S BLUFF; MEET ON 18TH In the last game in which He was none| Around the back stretch the Mercedes groaned and spluttered, missing fire, coughing, and w Jobnn y 0 Lear attle boy around on the back turn it exy who acquired the lightweight ch@m- ed a few times, rushed onward|Plonship of Car after a 16 with the dying push of the engine | fund bout with Frenchie |cently, has ca bluff in Hed the Frenchman's and stopped 1 to a return fight. Before the car stopped, De Johnny, in lette to Th Palma and his mechaniclan were| sporting editor, says he will. hep working desperately, frantteally,| Vaise again, if Vaise 1s in earne striving to put new spark of life] when he says b ont a into the cooling cylinders. cold, round be on himeele Dawson, urging his Natione “1 will gladly give Vaise @ speed, was whirling along, return fight and will fight him, ing rods wh the Mer winner take all, with $1,000 on gained feet. ind him Tetzlaff] the side,” O'Leary writes. “# and Hughes driving at 4 fight Bayley July 11, which Is | the opening day of the races, and will meet Vaise on the fol- lowing Saturday. “I am espectally gl speed that rivaled that of the ly hours of the race. Desperate, wild with excitement, De Paima commenced the final fight. His engine was dead, wrecked be-| Vaise because it put an end to yond repair—and, leaping behind| this bunk Frank Purcell has been | it, he started to push the giant car,| handing out to the effect that I was|mever train. You don't have to Only a few furlongs away, the finish. lin the finish that| mock a fellow out to win, or eut meant the cat’ prize of tre) im up to ribbons, I had Valse world, for his car; for himself|*¥!néing like @ gate and missing fame throughout the automobtle| me after time in every round. 7 wand: ana 000 With his| Beat bim to punch most of the i him. I did not » a whole lot, But I did the gallant Italian commenced| |” That’ shovin tt along. Every yard that] p0t Jet him birt me. Thats encase he pushed meant furlongs for his} the erippled car “I am confident of re rivals, Sweating, straining, dew-|., 1. : ey perate he faced the handicap. ates ms <4 ee tens ee The great crowd saw the situa-| joy ye" spite tion. Cheer after cheer arose. ‘ they watched the racing monsters | bear down upon the man who was striving to overcome the handica DANCE AT DREAMLAND of fate. Dawson swept by in a cloud of burning oll—swept on to! TONIGHT victory for the National. Tetzlaff Admission, including 5 Sc passed him, then Hughes, and etill| jy’ 2" Ti vice the Italian shoved and pushed—| and, when grimy, burned, ex-| — hausted, he pushed the Mercedes | across the finish line more than| 60,000 men and women arose and| screamed their admiration for his| plucky struggle, Beaten, De Palma received a} greater ovation than was extended | to the victor, and In defeat, won| more hearts than ever he h Commencing Monday, July 6th, | “Tensest Minute” Tomor- row.) | (Third NOON TAKES CUP! Henry Noon, of the Olympio Ten- nis club, won first honors in the annual tournament of that organt- zation, which closed yesterday, winning the tennis cup, much-prized Audley this year be- which py, oi Steinert, 7-8, at G. MeGuire, Hardesty fecond Round Chartes Ryan t W. Barnard, D, Alien beat W. Bherlock, 3-4, D. Allen beat J. Merritt, 11 W. Sherlock beat FE. Hardesty, 6 Third Round jonry Noon beat Charlies Ryai D .Allen beat W. Bheriock, 2 We Should “Bib” The changes in the Federal mi- gratory game laws announced Mon- day do not affect the game laws of the state of Washington, accord. | ing to Game Warden Harry Rief, of | King county. | Church Tourney Plans have been made by the Seattle Church Athletic league for holding a tennis tournament. A Philadelphia Judge has decided that pedestrians have the right of way over autos. In most places | they have the right of way—to the hospital or morgue. If they Insist on thelr right. SANDERSON’S PILLS For women only. lar and only reliab medy. | Cures the mo tinate | cases tn 3 to 10 days. Price, $2 box or % boxes for $5. Money returned {f they fail Call or write, Open evenings Most popu- RA D RE! Room 21, 217 Come Thru, Jack Jack Barry's plea of poverty did| And Eight Other not soften the heart of Judge Ev-| Entertainers erett Smith yesterday in proceed- , TO OUR PATRONS: Gene Lord Eva May Latham ings brought by Mrs. Barry, and he must pay up $1,600 he owes his| divorced wife, | cinaaeel The gerry formerly | We will open July 20th In a team. (Ef spick and span house, new car. | | Sete. stage. plush curtailing, . | ladies’ rest room liveried at- ‘Pop’ Takes Trip Jf tencant at main entrance, and : several other details, making SPOKANE, July 7.—“Pop” Ar-|f it the handsomest cafe on the lett left for San Francisco today, after getting his release from the Spokane club. coast. ON’T look for premiums or cou; as the cost of choice Turkish and domestic tobaccos blended Yn Camels prohibits their use. All the value goes into the cigarettes—you'll spot the difference amet gd you've Pate a nN just one smi ‘agrant (+) aftertaste. Get that? Give Camels atryout. 20 for 10 cents. ; Mf your dealer can't supply you, send 100 for one package or $1.00 for « carton of ten packages (200 cigarettes), post- one pach cents prod pony don’t find CAMELS a0 sooree eented, return the other nine packages end we will your money. Quality R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO-CO, Not Premiums Winston-Salem, N. C. "S SHOE HOSPITAL 613 Second Avenue NEXT TO BUTLER HOTEL KLEIN

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