The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1914, Page 7

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€ HOLAS’ the end ans had ant vio cia has n of an report, vy’ LAliian e was ate F. y that today of the ot ex Anna B year 1 find TOV ise iT ser , “and d me ) nese y net shing- shina ttered ‘ourth st. the F he ef- ed on gally, oprie- 24th mselt noned tered fe and Nome rived He THE TURKISH BLEND CIGARETTES Are a pleasure that you add to other pleasures ! They're Distinctive! WHITE'S HOPES “AREIN A SLEEP TAP OR A FOUL MILWAUKEE, Nov. §.—Charile ‘White will try to ‘Weish’s lightweight crown in a ten. Juries and Found bout here tonight. To do so, he must either knock| yout Welsh or win on a foul, as prize Cornell bas turned the we ral | five days left before the Wash ington game, the Oregon coaches are working with grim determ! tion to overcome the handicap of aa ra that have sickness crippled the lemon-yellow team. The loss of Malarkey, Cook and \s heavily fight decisions are not allowed in| 4ainst Oregon, but the squad has Wisconsin. They meet at catch- ‘weights, Welsh probably will enter ‘the ring at 136 pounds, and White 133, his usual fighting weight. “I am going to do my best to win the title with one punch,” said ‘White today. Welsh professed to believe that tonight's bout would be nothing ™more than a workout for him. “I know I can beat White at ev- ery angle of the game,” he said, “and intend to give him a boxing lesson. The man does not live who! @an take my title in ten rounds.” | refused to say di Everythin Capt. Parson: | make that W | for every point.” Sam Cook ts tn the hospital with lan attack of the mumps, and the | doctor has decreed that Malarkey must turn in his suit for the rest | of the season Trainer Hayward bas anncunced | that there was littla chance of Cor. | nell’s knee being in shape so that lthe veteran quarter ‘could last, or even start, the Washington game. against us,” eald ut we are going to ington crew work WON'T PLAY IN BIG GAME HERE EUGENE, Or, Nov. §—With leave Thursday and about 18 players | will make the trip, ¥ regiment hes a ist fn {ts ran! Bggatre Myers Sbacee Or: SANTRY, EX-PUG, IS NOW A SOLON Edward M. Santry le now @ nator In lilinols, elected ping majority in t rict. Edward M. try, Is the same Eddie Santry who won the world’s bantam tities by whipping Palmer, the Eng. lishman, and who once beat Joe me Gane. After retiring from the ring he entered Chicago politics, has held positions in the county buliding and now enters the leg- islature, HOSPITAL TRAINS PARIS, Nov. 9.-—France has #0 new trains of 600 capacity each for carrying wounded soldiers, who are| classified according to gravity of the cases. Each train has 20 pas- senger cars, and is complete from kitchen to operating room. STAR—MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1914. |not have to worry about winning! PAGE 7, | | | A GLIMPSE AHEAD i 1950-—-Ad Wolgast will break a hand JIMMY CLABBY says the eating Jof seven meals a day while crow ing the F one PoTAT. ifie transformed Cyclone f c p N.. Thompson from a lightweight to a middie, If he reads this, Art Wil son will take a round trip and train, down for Jack Johnson owe A fearful promoter has taken | out a $10,000 accident insurance policy on Charlie White. Anoth: er example of the high cost of promoting. ee | TEN thousand persons dug up enough dough to see Welsh and Wolgast perform in New York. Why | talk of financial depression? | cee | “FOOTBALL INJURIES FATAL” | Keep the above head standing for | daily use. | eee Christy Mathewson took Heinle Zimmerman over to the Van Cort landt club links a fe teach the big slugger reat and Jancient game of golf. As Zimmer | man squared away at the tee ald "You seo, the object of this game iw to hit the ball into the little hole] lby that flag you see just over the! hin.” | “Hetnte,” who can hit a baseball) farther than any man in the major |leagues, whistled the ball off the tee and over the hill toward the jhote, As he walked up on the |ereon he found his baW was lying | within a foot of the cup, He look-| ed at it a minute and then sald “By gowh, I minsed it.” eee News that Dave Bancroft of the Portiand Coast league club | will play with the Philadelphia | Nationale next season does not | surprise nine-tenths of the Se attic fans who saw Bancroft | here with the Portland Colts two seasons ago. Bancroft was lly the best shortstop ever in by Northwestern league patrons, He left the league at the fag end of the | newspape: openly charge that Connie Mack ts trying| to weaken his team by ing rid of Plank and Bender. Mack is said| to be sore because the fans did not} Support his several times winning) Philadelphia Athletics this year./ This may be true, but in the opin-| fon of a great many experts, he does the 1915 pennant. The Boston Red Sox loom up Wiready as the pros pective champions. The Sox look ed far the best during the closing| Buy Prince Albert aff over the nation—eny- everywhe: Toppy red bags, (handy for cigarette ouehere)s tidy red tine, 10¢; “4 ind and half- drawing aces to jam a jimmy pipe brimful or roll up a makin’s cigarette with Prince Albert, then make fire with a match! Such smokings! Yes, sir, the kind you can draw to all day and all night and have a lot of fun all the time! Prince Albert came into the game five years ago a little stranger ina big land, but it was cut for a square deal, and today it is the one best bet of men everywhere who play fair with their tongues and want fair with -all the cards on the jogany! Catch the thought? RINGE ALBERT the national joy smoke is built like a thoroughbred. It won't kick, it won't bite, it won't parch! That's because it is made by the now world-famous patented > that cuts out the kick and the bite and the parch! No other tobacco ever was or in be today anywhere near like Prince rt! You can raise right here—and clean the table—that Prince Albert will win with you because it's true blue, any way you play it! Costs a dime to sit in and ii id out first-hand that all we claim for Prince Albert is case cards—signed, sealed, delivered—with the reputation of this great business right behind ev grain of tobacco! s that listen R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Winston-Salem, N. C. i mynn, sailed Saturday for England! iitor the purpose of meeting Jack f!! going to Vancouver to fulfill a date | <\ | pickpockets. weeks of the race. eee One “expert” deciares a foreign army could sweep the United States tor ears. Rosh; we don't need an army Let ‘em hit some of the country! roads around King county. cee Jack Curley, manager of Jim Johnson there and getting him to sign articles for a fight with Jess Willard at Juarez, Mexico, dn New Year's afternoon. It is said that Curley will offer Johnaon $30,000 and a third of the moving pictures.) eee “Rough House” Charley Burns is with Champion Johnny O'Leary, so Matchmaker Salt has had to find a| substitute for Sammy Good tn the four-round show Austin & Salt will conduct in thelr place Tuesday night. Billy Williams will fill Burns’ shoes and the bout gives! prospect of being one of the warm-| est on the card eee ) ° SPECIAL OFFER | . ° Now that the wrestling season ts in full blast, Jabs has decided to offer three cups, one for each of the following classes One hundred and eighty pound Heavyweight transom climbers. Lightweight secondstory men. Sie tit) Bet They Didn't Quibble Over the Welght 1816—First ring fight in Amert-| oa; Jacob Hyer vs. Tom Beasley While Seattle took the short end of the 6-2 Victoria All | Star soccer p fully aware | that the local players were in the game head and feet Sunday at Dug dale park, It was as pretty an ex hibition of the Hnglish pastime as| one could wish for, At Carbonado the home team registered a 2 to 0 victory against the Seattle Celtios, eee score, the i As predicted in these columns, the Lincoln high school team van- quished the Queen Anne high team from the Interscholastic title race | Saturday, although the close score | was surprising. Lincoln won, 7 to 0, but was never in any danger. | Lincoin's victory means that its | game scheduled with Broadway Nov, 21 will be distinctly a cham- plonship affair, Two gam re scheduled for the present week. The Greatest Clothes Offer Ever Made to the Public Levetan, the tailor, has made good clothes for years. His rep- utation stands as a statue among the clothes artists of America. He has been forced to come down on his price. Therefore, his high class wool- ens, which he had bought to sell at $35, $40 and $50, are being sacrificed. Step into the store, pick the pattern you like best, and have him make a swell suit or over- coat to fit you. The same linings and trim- mings are being used as before. It’s a case of grasping the op- portunity when you have the chance. NOTICE This sale positively ends this week Look for the Bright Store Across From the Alaska Building LEVETAN THE TAILOR 617 SECOND AVENUE On Friday Lincoln meets We: attle and Saturday comes the Anne-Ballard confilct. 8e-| not release George Varnell trom| in almost every Central American en| acting as referee for their game | revolution of recent years, has been next Saturday, so another referee | sentenced to be shot at sunrise, and eee will have to be chosen for the Ore- | been put of the Atlantio in an open It looks Ike another victory | #on-Washington game here Satur-| boat to perish, but he never get¢ for C. B. G. Palmen’s Central | day. |enough trou! grammar school football eleven | | a | GRID HERO FIGHTS (CANS OTHER MEDALS in the grade school league. LONDON, Nov. 9.—King Albert Saturday the Centrals cleaned up the B. F. Days, 18 to 0, and next Saturday meet the Wash- | ington aggregation for the title. | a The Centrals won the city | y¢ champlonship last year ee Coaches Stewart and Griffith will’ Cuba, the Philippines, Mexico and ‘George. LONDON, Noy, 9.—Johnnie Poe, 4 football hero at Princeton 20 “ years ago, is now @ cannoneer in| (ons now-—-the Sevach milivass ‘eat-nephew of the poet, and a| of Belgium wears only two decora: - the British army, Ho has fought tn | Medal and the Russian Cross of St, _

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