The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 19, 1914, Page 7

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BOY PUNCHES BAG| AND NOW IS SLATED} TO CAST LOT WITH) LEADING FIGHTERS | when he entered the Cleveland Elks Set Opening Smoker for Sept. 29; Card Is Good The boxing season in Seattle will be under full sway Tue: day, September 29, when the Elke club, under the direction of Physical Director Pat Scott, g ives ite first winter smoker, tt is getting together a splendid array of ot Promises the of the best fistic proc of the Free Admission AT DREAMLAND 10 Dance Tickets for 25¢ Everyone Welcome 1007 Hoge Bldg. QM. Out-of-Town Buyer | — your printing oy matt | | FRANK P. NOLAN 1407 Fifth Ave. Re will save you money oa al) printing orders. | j THE VIRGINUS HOTEL} estes | Phone Ellictt 803. teeth are replaced by Method by artificial teeth natural as your original nations are now be- without charge, and are furnished fn al! cases. We Stand Back of Our Work for 12 Years’ Guarantee. Set of Teeth © Solid Gold or Crown @ Gold or Porcelain Work . $4 | Solid Gold Fillings ap $1 Up Other Fillings . 50¢ Office hours, 8:30 to 6. 9 to 12 OHIO Cut-Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY STREET CORNER SECOND AVENUE Asthma! Bronchial | Asthma! If you are a sufferer from asthma in any form, it will pay you to Investigate. I have cured asthma of 30 years’ standing, not in ‘Boston and New York, but here in Seattle and towns around Seattle, and I have not failed in one of them. Now, if you are a suf. ferer from this disease and can’t sleep nights, I will give relief at once and a cure in time. The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth- ma, Bronchitis arrh in all its forms, such as Tonsilitis, Adenoids, Gastric U) of the tomach and Bowels, Catarrh of the Bladder, Prostatitis in men, all Bowel Diseases in Rheumatism of all Nervous Di: Heart and Eezema, and many others too numer. ous to mention. If you are in doubt, write aud I will give and addresses of have cured. Sundays, pay, Olympic View Sanitarium, 14.16 W. Harrison DR. G. J. NUERNBERG Phone Queen Anne 3127 | Athletic | Duvall, | with Ad Schaffii, | Dutchman, who has appeared many ‘times before the local boxing fol | siduously year, Pinkman ve. Farrell Topping the program is a four round bout between Edward Pink man, former 125-pound P fle Northwest amateur champion, won a8 @ representative of the Seattle club, and the Seattle boy who has just re turned from an Eastern tnvaston Farrel! ts a topnotcher in the Northwest. During his trip he lost only one fight, that a decision to Freddie Welsh after 12 hard-fought rounds Vetro In “Come-Back” Scott ts trying to match Andy another former amateur, the sturdy little lowing, Thy bout, if arranged, will occupy the semi-windup post. tion on the card, Bennie Farrell probably will have Billy Vetro for an opponent. Billy has been out of the game for over & year, but has been training as- and ts In fairly good shape for his “come-back,” Matchen between a number of outside fight- ers will round out the card, Pigskin Pickups Around the Loop WASHINGTON STATE COL- LEGE, Pullman, Sept. 19,.—With the opening of college, Coach Johnnie Bender brought his bunch of 20 or more huskies in from the timber up at Twin Lakes, where |he has been conducting a summer camp. The college has the light- est aggregation of football ma terfal it has bad in many years. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu gene, Ore, Sept. 19—Coach Bez dek slipped a surprise to bis squad when he sent them into a hard scrimmage session lasting an hour afternoon one day sooner than ex. pected @ Captain Parsons telephoned that he was bringing to Eugene Johnny Beckett and Lloyd Teggart. AD IS IN A DRAW MILWAUKEE, Sept. 19.—Adé Wolgast and Joe Mandot boxed a fast 10-round draw in this city last | night Mandot was the aggressor | throughout, but Wolgast rior defense enabled him to ‘keep out of danger. P. N. A. MEETING Delegates from all parts of the Northwest began arrivi in Seat- tle today for the annual P. N. A. meeting at the Seattle Athletic club Sunday. Seattle may get the P. N. A. fleld meet, scheduled for Vancouver. Football Toda NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—The first football of the year fn the East takes place the Cartisie Indians meet the Al- bright college eleven in a practice game. ’ m™. Loule 1 (called end of 12th, darkness); New York 3, Cinctonat! 2; Philadelphia 4, Pittebure 4; Brooklyn 3, Chicago 0 AMERICAN—-Boston 4, Cleveland 3; Detroit 2. Philadelphia 2, Washington 1 St. Louls 0; Chicago 7, New York & FEDERAL—tuffaio % St. Lovie 1 Kansas City 5, B Ind@thnapotie 5, Brooklyn 4; Pi Chicago 2 COAST—-Ban F: Mission © Oakland &, Low & Pet one 60 29 bre Philadelphia ame Pittebure 4a3 Cineinnatt “ Brooklyn ase AMERICAN TEAGUE Won. Loat *hiladelphia bene 4 ton s1 10 “ 62 6 oO FEDERAL LEAGUE ‘on. Loat | Indianapolis 18 (89 7% (8 7 641 524] a 64 15 Ot 618 “ 7 456 os any 6 O78 419 COAST LEAGUE Won Lost. Pet et 610 2 6 640 Loa Anaelen 80 38 17 98 446 46 104 ase Bake Oven ‘Treatment for Rheumatism and All Con- St. P | Stove Repa’r & Plumbing Co. Origina’ fire back Hinings and repaire for all kinds of stoves, ranges and SANDERSON’S PILLS” only, Mest popa- ly reliable obstinate 7 to 10 days, Pr or 1 boxes tor : returned if they fall after talr trial. Open ev RAYMOND REMEDY CO. Room 28, 217% Pike Bt. "2 #h Billy Parrett, ; this afternoon when | Dan Hayes, the Chicago Battier, suddenly has jumped into promi. | | nence by whipping Stanley Shuba in five hustling rounds, | an unknown, punching the bag in a Chicago gymnasium until last year, | aaa middleweight Since then he has been coming rapidly, and with a few more battles under hie belt will be ready to go after the topnotchers, Hayes amateur tournament “Lay Down Your Arms.” tells the “woman of the stirring events story will be published CHAPTER Vill. I threw myself back in the cor ner and should have liked to ery— tears of apite Ike a naughty child I was in a rage with myself; how) could I ever have been #0 cold, #0 | impolite, s0_rough almost to a man | with whom I feel such sympathy? It was the fault of the princess How I hated her! What was thie? Jealousy? Then the explanation of | what was moving me burst on me| | -I was in love with Tiling. “In| love, love, love!” wheels on the pavement “You are in love with him! what the street lamps as they flew past darted on me. “You love him!” was breathed to me out of my glove, which I pressed to my Mps on the place that he had kissed. Several days passed without my seeing Tilling again. Every even ing I went to the theatre, and from thence to a party, expecting and hoping to meet him, but in vain My reception day brought me many visitors but, of course, not him, But I did not expect him It was not like him after his de. cision, “That you really must not expect from me, countess,” and his saying at the carriage doo: in so hurt a manner, “I understand—then not at all,” to present himself at my house on a day of the kind |I had offended him that evening that was certain; and he avoided meeting me again—that was clear Only, what could I do? I was on fire to see him again, to make amends for my rudeness on the for. mer occasion, and get another hour of a talk such as I had had at my father’s—an hour's talk-the delight of which would now be increased to me a hundredfold by the con sciousness, which had now become plain to me, of my love oe In default of Tilling, the follow ing Saturday brought me at least Tilling’s cousin, the lady at whose ball I had made his acquaintance. On her entrance my heart began to beat Now I could at least learn some thing about the man who gave me so much to think about Still { could not bring myself to put a direct question to this effect I felt that I was not in a condition to speak out his very name with out blushing so as to betray my self; and therefore | talked to my visitor about a hundred different _... |thinga-—-even the weather among |the rest-—but avoided that very | tople which lay at my heart | “Oh, Martha,” said she, without any preparation, “I have a mes sage to give you. My cousin Fred. erick begs to be remembered to jyou. He went away the day he fore yesterday,” I felt the blood desert. my cheeks late Maroness Bertha Van Suttner atirred the civilired world with ber book At the request of the American Pence Society the book has been translated Into English. Impressive descriptive works on the horrors of modern w side” of confilct, and the w The Star from day to day during the next tw: By Baroness Bertha Von Suttner Famous Austrian Novelist and Peace Advocate, and in 1905 Winner of the Nobel Pence I'rise. rattled ow the | "was | STAR—SATURDAY, SEPT, 19, 1914. PORT [WATCH THE GLOVES FLY OVER HERE THIS YEAR; AMERICA NOW | IS THE WORLD’S FIGHT CENTER was ‘LAY DOWN YOUR ARMS’ A Thrilling Story of What War Means to Woman and the Home. | It is one of the most graphic and fare ever written, It “Went away? Tragiingal moved?” | “No; but he has taken a short leave of absence to hurry off to Berlin, where his mother is on her dewthbed. Poor fellow, I am sorry for him, for I know how he adores his mother,” Where? Is his Two days afterwards I received a letter in a hand I did not know, with the postmark of Berlin. Even before I saw the signature, I knew that the letter was Tilling’s, It ran thus “8 FRIEDRICH 9T., March 30, 1863, 1 a. m. | “Dear Countess—I must tell my grief to some one, but why to you? Have I any right to do #0? No; |but I have an trresistiblo impulse. You will feel with me. I know you will “If you had known her who ts dying you would have loved her That soft heart, that clear intel lect, that Joyous temper—all her dignity ‘and worth—all is now tined for the grave. No hope have spent the whole day at her| bedside, and am going to spend the night also up here—her last night. She has suffered much, | poor thing. Now she is quiet. Her powers are falling. Her pulse is| already almost stopped, Besides me there are watching In her room her sister and a physician, “Ah! this is terrible separation Death! One knows, it ta that it must happen to every one; | | true, | | enthusiasm | weary | fights desperately and yet one can never rightly take in that it may reach those whom | we love also, What this mother of mine was to me I cannot tell | you. She knows that she is dying. | When I arrived this morning she| received me with an exclamation | of Joy. ‘So that fs you! 1 see you} once more, my Fritz, I did so fear! you would come too late.’ You will get well again, mother,’ 1} cried, ‘No! No! There is noth ing to say about that, my dear} boy. Do not profane our last time | together with the usual sick-bed | f consolations Let us bid each! other good-bye.’ | “T fell sobbing on my the bedside You are erying, Fritz, Look! I am not going to say to you the usual “Do not weep.” J am glad that your parting from your best and oldest friend gives you pain That assures mo that I shall long knees at} live In your remembrance. Re member that you have given me much joy. Except the anxiety | which the fllnesses of your child hood caused, and the torture when | you were on campaign, you have given me none but happy feelings. | jand have helped me to bear every |sadness which my lot has laid on me. I bless you for it, my child,’ | wreath of PAGE 7 no we Wille Ritchie By Left Hook you believe this isn’t go: a great year in the box Don't ing to ing game! Burope may be doing tts fight ing with cold steel and shrapnel. but what did Europe ever amount to in the fight game, nyway? (Sit down, Freddie Welsh you won't have it when you go back.) Things look awfully bright {In lightweight class. That's the |cream of the glove game, anyway.|ing club wil! There are at least four top-notch ers who are going to make things interesting with thelr quarrels during the fall and . Welsh Ships B. Isle Freddie Welsh took one look Your King and Your Country Need You! Enilist!"—and de- cided that as a king Woodrow had it over George, and that th h United & good spot for anybody with a lightning left and a light weight crown, At that, the «Pontypridd product needs us worse than we need him, The first real clash to awaken would be meeting with Willie Ritchie. harlie White, who, by the way, possessen some left himself, eeems | to have the beat chance at an early meeting with the Briton. Ritchie has been keeping himself in great shape, and if he doesn't get a return match with Welsh| right off, may be persuaded to take chite. Out tough an@d hard-hitting| friend, Adolph Wolgast, must not be left ont of the reckoning by any means, Ad has a whole flock of good ten-round fights left in him Leach Cross and Joe Rivers will have to discontinue fighting—each other. The last battle hardly paid training expenses. The Mexican, however, ts in {t still, not because he can lick them, but because they can't lick him. Rivers doesnt know how to win, but he sure knows how to keep the other fellow from winning, The other classes are sure to warm up as soon as the season weara on, and some good battles will be arranged. Purses may not be as large as heretofore, but that will be the greatest thing that can happen to the game. Less dough and more fights will help things considerably, And pain came on now another attack of her| It was heartrend ing to see how she cried and| groaned, how her features were distorted. Yes! Death is a fear ful, a cruel enemy; and the sight of this agony called back to my rec ollection all the agonies which I had witnessed on battlefields and in the hospitals. When I think that we men sometimes hound each other on to death gratuit ously and cheerfully, that we ex pect youth in the fullness of its strength to offer itself willingly to this enemy, against whom even and broken old age yet {t is revolting ‘Farewell, my dear boy.’ Those were her last words. Then she closed her eyes and slept Sleep soundly, my dear mother. In tears I kiss your dear hands. “Yours in deadly sorrow, “FRIEDRICH TILLING.” . e-. I sent on the same day a funeral a hundred large white with a single half-blown Would he under- stand that the pale ascentiess flowers belonged to the departed) as a symbol of mourning, and the} little rose—-to himself? (Continued Monday.) GAME OFF; RAIN Rain again caused the postpone- camelias, red rose in it, |ment of the Vancouver-Seattle post series game at Dugdale's park Fri day. Double-headers will be played today and Sunday, The first games start at 2 o'clock ‘SCOTTY IS DYING According to word received by Joe Wilba, of this city, “Scotty” Ferguson, a well-known race track man, once a famillar figure in the Northwest, is dying at Butte, Mont, . three pennants in a row. another | Jack Hendricks Is slated to manage the Cubs next year. He's w handling the Indianapolis team, in the American association, a club that in one year he took from the bottom to a satisfactory spot in| REACH INTO SMALL the race, Hendricks, never a great player when in the minor league 2 r nt to Denver from Fort Wayne, and gave the Weatern league lean BURG FOR ITS '15 No wonder th Romeo says that his wife has been cruel to him, and has |g | Emil Frisk to Spokane and | brought Powell to Vancouver He made the trade principally Powell is a younger or man than Frisk and Is a right-handed hitter, He wanted a right-handed hitter | because he was top-heavy with | the other kind. . . | FALLS FOR OLD ONE | They keep telling us how baseball impro yet the oth , At Pittsburg, Rog Bres . coaching at third, yelled | | | | for the ball and Pitcher Mam | | aux th: it to him, Rog dodg: | | ing it and letting it go to the | stands. Sheckardiski used to | | work that in the Nile Valley | | ague, during the reign: of Seti I Oe —¢ A recent edition of the Boxing World of yndon said “In spite of the war, we may rest assured that the boxing is not by any| means dead. The National Sport 1 am informed on re- itable authority, open ite doors as } usual riy in October, Jack Cal }iaghan also is busy with the new boxing pavilion, which will be j known as the West End Stadium." | see | Thus far the Wisconsin censor | | has not decided to delete the death lists from the hunting reports. cee | Butte, Mont. promoters have made overtures to Johnny O'Leary, joffering him a bout with Young Wallace, {f he will come to that city. It ts quite likely Johnny will consent unless the Vancouver pro- moters have conned him into stick- ing around for a couple of more |fights in the Canuck town. There jis no money in the fight game in Canada at present and just why Johnny remaing {n Vancouver ts a rather hard problem to figure out, unless it's the climate or the brew WEEKS FILLS IN NEW YORK, Sept 19.—Justice | Weeks will temporartly fill the place left vacant by the death of James Sullivan, secretary-treas- urer of the A. A. U. The A. A, U will erect a memorial in memory of Sullivan. BAIRD A WINNER) WALLA WALLA, Sept. 19.—/) Far! Baird, Seattle, outpointed | Billy Nelson in three rounds here} Friday night. Henry Gleason, also | of Seattle, was defeated by Frank Huelett, Portland, in a fast four round bout. |A. A. U. MEET O | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 19 The amateur all-around champton-|* Es ship athletic meet is on here today Atlas of the War in Europe The Seattle Star has just received a shipment of war atlases specially prepared for this publication This Atlas is made up of twenty pages of beautiful maps, each 12x15| inches in size, showing all the coun-| tries of Kurope in detail, One page lis devoted to a map of the world jshowing the possessions of each nation. Two pages show the map of Europe, two pages show Russia in detail. Two pages are devoted to Austria-Hungary, two pages to France and two pages to Germany. ]One page is devoted to Italy and smaller maps show all the other! jcountries on large maps | Two pages are devoted to giving \facts and figures on the peace and| | war strength of the various nations |of Europe: The front page shows the pictures | of most of the crowned heads of | Kurope This wonderful atias has just! come off the press and is right up to date, All the changes in boun-| daries caused by the Balkan war| are shown, | One of these maps will be given| with each six months’ subscription | for The Seattle Star by mail, at! the regular price of $1.80, Old and| new subseribers may both take ad-| vantage of this offer. If your sub-| scription 1s now paid in advance, | we will extend it six months from the time {t expires upoh receipt of sr from you. This offer is to| subscribers receiving thetr papers | by mail only, Address all orders to The Seattle Star, Circulation De partment, Seattle, Wash. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 19.—Tel F us turned topey turvey ere Fr afternoon when R. Nor= sms, Wearing the national OMEO HAGEN, the box Frank Chance Is sentimental. One crown, formerly the proper er-beautiful, has Ineti- {day the Chicago Cubs were riding Maurice E. MeLoughlin, went tuted divorce proceed | northward, and the train passe jown to defeat ‘before the racquet Ings In the superior court through a small city f M. Chureh, Princeton against Iva Hagen, to whom he | “Sullivan,” remarked one, read tain, in the final round for the was married on May 26, last, jing the sign board interes in Centraiia, Washington Sullivan,” yelled Chance, jumy Church fiiame in four nored the rules to “love, honor Chureh outplayed and outwitted and obey.” The baker also Williams, who seemed to contends Mrs. Hagen has man- off form. Church put a ifested no affection for him, service across the net which the Romeo was married a few days champion constantly mishandled, after his brother Ed, also a {On the other hand Williams was fighter, Joined the benedicts | unable to get bis usual speed on ee ee | it his own servic nd Church had Bob Brown says he is going | = no difficulty ning serves, to get rid of Watt Powell, out eon fielder. He admits he got the ++ IMAGINE FREDDIE WELSH | worst of the deal which sent i |COMING INTO THE RING AT | Sullivan, and tree for miles around.” CHICAGO CUBS TO € majors want him PILOT, HENDRICKS Church Downs Wizard — score and 7. | MILWAUKEE BRIT WEARING 2} THE SH FLAG Dear old Sul — is the ball park. | ber it. It was up| in that old park that I played as a kid. Ah, those were happy daye, the happiest of my life. Dear old Ii I know every rock livan. Illinois “that’s Sullivan, echded Ind.” eckard ; That Seattle billiard parlor Come in and « has the fin In the world? A 14-year-old golfer beat Cham-| pion Rautenbusch, which proves | BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor that 14 years in America beats 100) in Scotland. The Marsans family honor being hurt, it offers the Cincinnati Reds | the servicgs of a younger brother | to make up for the jumping of Ar-| manda, If the honor holds out ry Herrmann may own the whole Marsans family. | . . When shall we two meet again?” is @ useless question for Travis and Travers. In the semi-finals or finals of every championship meet. Refined Cafe Vaudeville Catering to the Select ST. LOUIS, Sept. 19.—Pierre Maupome, a Mexican, broke the world’s record for a three-cushion run here Iast night when he ran} up a string of 18. The former rec ord was 15 and was held by G. W. Moore. } GOLF TITLE IS UP GLENCOVE, N. Y., Sept | Miss Elaine V. Rosenthal, Chicago. is playing Mrs. H. Arnold Jackson Boston, here today for the national women’s golf championshtp J. 1. JOHNSON, Gen. Mgr. E. G. Wood, Amnt. Mgr. Complete Report of Market Today Prices Paid Producere for Vegetables and rected daily bF 3. W. potatoes sweet potatoes, 1b, Godwin & Co.) green ng ontons eeo@ ~ 10 doz: : Cauliftower per’ don celery . . parcied tomatoes esee cane strained Valencia oranges Cal. lemons, per crate Cantaloupes Cooking apples Oregon Gravensteins CAN BE SEEN AT @ e9sssees0 krapes 1.00 id Producers for B ‘oultry. Veal and ‘i ea e 1 ver 3 Ibe 2 @ D old... Ducks, young 10 @ a 200 @ 2 5 i ir @ | Vent, 65 to 120-b 1 @ Veal, large + 0 @ (8 vee Oe Suck ies ce wat S. S. H. B. Kennedy (Corrected daily Tad Bradner Co! LEAVES COLMAN DOCK . Kise - 39 8. 8. H, B, Kennedy leav tive: WASSER ET Oe man Dock 6:30, 10:30 a. m. Nureamery, brick 32 80 p. m. Other boats at ve Washington .m, and 2 p,m. rhamery, solid pack s+ 31 Bh A BP, Mantern brick +++. 28 Fare, round trip, 50c. Chik [Wisconsin tripleta iren, 5 to 12, 25¢. hes LEARN TO PLAY Any one wishing to learn the game of Pocket Billiards will get a world of information by attending the games played by experts every afternoon at 2:15 and every evening at 7:30 At the White House Billiard Parlors in the Joshua Green Building, Fourth and Pike. An academy with seating capacity for 300 people has been built to accommodate the public, IMPERIAL BAR AND READING ROOM At 206 Occidental Service Bar and Pool Tables in Connection CHOICE LIQUORS AND CIGARS

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