The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 2, 1914, Page 7

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if, the meet clerks made ibition have sly in art of law int to Y f ' We Stand Back of Our Work PAT SCOTT AND CHET NEFF DRAW IN SENSATIONALLY FOUGHT BOUT BEFORE ELKS; SCOTT HAS A SHADE Tn one fights yet stag fog ring hotcher a nd | generous Amount of left Jabs and ox-|80Veral stiff rights in the face. may it w announced that will meet ny O ry at » HEXt Pacific club smoker, Be fight O'Leary winner, If ther last night, it was Scott Scott amoring fora return match A little over a year ago Ed Pinkman, then coming up fast gained a decision over Anderson, a Vancouver Ander. son, Last night they met again and Anderson showed wonderful Improvement was a good draw. Pinkman howed very plainly that he Still lack® one of the chief as sets—Infighting and Art Wile omedy bout tn which Man” was victor. Wi same dub that he al-| 1 in a Seattle b Pat Scott, wh the lightweights a le night ai gaining Dan North a top w of years 4 hal mada an Chet ner Salt t « featured Harr: considerad! ‘4 t. Ais . after los Neff, ull for was sh in t the third the crowd on in one had palling Pat to aky tress for a his stride Cohen mm fur | Leo Cr ter ¢ Billy given a vier outpointed big Wal. anger in four rounds and Farrel! and Billy Vetro were draw verdict NEFF BATTLE DEC. 8 CHANCE TO DESERT rhe Pact er, at which ¢ ny O'Lear e event, will be ht Dec. §, Dan Salt Athletic et PORTLAND, Met Ore. Dec. 2. the give a chance ls before signing ct, according te issued by McCredie Judge ortiand resday every announced today a ¥ a stateme: Tuesday. DECIDE WHAT TO DO CHICAGO, Dec. 2.—A meeting of the national commis. sion will be held in New York Monday to decide the fate of the deserters who have been left fob: less by the Feds’ decision to mit its clubs to 20 players. KELLAR IS BESTED NEW YORK, Deo. 2 Carty, of Lewiston, Mont ed Terry Kellar of California tn a That mayor Ib So was piped through the streets and connected with all faucets may have a friend anxious about Ping Bodle's comfort. fellow who { Milwaukee to wrote — th ask if be spectal en ‘Tom Mc- , Outpoint- |PLAYED HOOKEY FROM SCHOOL TO TAK LESSONS, NOW MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPION Some nine years ago, when Jim my Clabby, then 14 years of age,| was escorted by his daddy to see « couple of boys don the gloves, he| | 20-round bout fought here Tues- day night’ MeCarty outweighed | Kellar six pounds. ‘THEY CAN'T SWITCH NEW YORK, Dec. 2.—Hereatter| racing Judges will have no power to change a decision after a formal announcement has been made from the stand, the National Trotting association bas decided. 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 tn one of BOSTON, Dec. X—Harry Stone | of New York whipped Gilbert Gal. lant {n a 12round bout here Tues-| day night. was introduced to Ole Olson, the| | featherweight, and that was what }started Clabby ringward. He ad. mits playing hookey from school | on various occasions just to take | some lessons from Olson—and Father Clabby had no protests to offer when the real facts became knoyn. Clabby’s first bout was at La Porte, Ind. where he put on the gloves with some unknown tn six-round affair that was called a draw Clabby ts a baseball bug of the! virulent type and can shake hands and call by name 60% of the big leaguers, for he never misses a! game ‘when the opportunity af. ruary 27 STAR—WEDNESDAY, DEC, 2, 1914, PAGE 7. JOE BONDS MAY MEET MAN WHO ONCE BEAT HIM TACOMA, Deo, 2.—Manager Shanklin of the Eagles Is ne gotiating today with Al Nor ton, the only heavyweight, to defeat Joe Bonds of this cit with @ view to matching the men in a fourround bout, to be staged December 17. The two boxers met last July In Butte and Norton stop. ped the local man In eight rounds. Bonds clatmsa, however, he was suffering from mountain fever at the time and only went Into the ring to save his $500 forfeit money. It Is said that Hank O'Day will umpire in the American league next season, When Hank was “canned” from the Cinctnnat! man agement, Ban Johnaon offered him | & job, but he returned to the tlonals. Hank's dignity would have to be as tongh as elephant hide to allow him to return a second time, so Mrs, Ru-| mor probably has the right dope this time. Having proved by comparative scores that Michigan 1» 61 points better than Notre Dame, we can now take the case of Syracuse and Jimmy Clabby fords. He's a tennis sharp and an all. around athlete prove that Notre Dame ts 76 points better than Michigan. The | dope ts grand football medicine, : : The opening om smoker at the Ra) vensdale Athletic club will be held | Saturday, Dec. 19, and not 29. previously announced MOTOR BOAT SHOW CHICAGO, Dec, 2.—Definite an nouncement was made today that the largest motor boat show ever undertaken in the West will be staged at the Coliseum from Feb-! JACK to March 6, inclusive. HOPES. Glenn Warner having signed a contract to coach Pittsburg “U" at football probably will have the softest anap on rec- ord. You will understand th when the other colleges an- nounce their Pittaburgless echedules. Dec. as St. Louis pigeon race pigeons failed to return. pigeon is a smart bird. had a homing and a lot of the The ANYHOW, ARE CHARLE GooD AND them. Now, !f you are a suf- ferer from this disease and can't sleep nights, J will give relief at once and « cure tn time. The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth- II) ilies ma, Bronchitis, Catarrh tn all []) Continued From Page 1 | {ts forms, such Tonstiitis, I} oe ae : Adenoids, Gastric Ulcer of the Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh | when I talked with him what tre | of the Bladder, Prostatitis in JJ, ™endous duties rest on his shoul-| men, all Bowel Diseases in |] @¢r, and beyond Von Hertzendort women; Rheumatism of all is the chief, who says, “Do this,” | forms; all Nervous Diseases, or “Do that.” Epilepsy, Heart and Eczema, Hundreds of thousands of men} and many others too numer. Jf ®re obeying orders at this mo-| ous to mention. If you are in J}, ment just as these men at the bat doubt, write and I will give tery are, not knowing results, but you names and addresses of blindly confident in their faith in people I have cured. the archduke commander and Von | Hertzendorf. Lj le View Sanitarium, | a eiate W. Heerlecn |Phones New Range | OR. G. J. NUEBNBERG yen Hiding Place | 1:15 p. m—But to get back to Phone Queen Anne 3127 yee eae 1 aa INE te hole begins to talk through the/ | telephone again. He yelle out new numbers. Somewhere hidden out there among the hills, several mil jaway, {s an Austrian officer wt can see where the first shell struck. Evidently the range was not what he wanted and he is phoning from his hiding place a new range and direction. Gun No. 2 fs shifted tilted Within a minute When, its shrieking way. for more phone orders They come immediately The! range was perfect. Somewhere those shells are doing deadly work. There must be more of them With a giant burring of ex plosions, shrieks and «wishes, sev eral more shells go on their way. There fs more work to be done in the hills, but we don’t know what it ts. All these men do is “load shoot. ‘load, shoot,” listen to the | shrieking shells and wonder what has happened. | Scenic Cafe FIRST AND STEWART and re its shell goes We wait A Place to Eat | dead of they say. for 12 Years’ Guarantee. $25 Set of Teeth Guaranteed $15 Set of Teeth Guaranteed $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown . $10 Gold or Porcelain Bridge Work Solid Gold Fillings Other Fillings ... Office hours, 8:30 to 6. Sundays, {es old farm house 9 to 12 The scene in the yard ts inde | seribable I have my pencil and paper in hand, but don’t know what to write. traw under the trees through hich the sunshine filters are 207 UNIVERSITY STREET CORNER SECOND AVENUE 1:25 p. m—On the other side of | the road, half a mile away, is a second battery. We go over there. | On the way we find two boys dig- OHIO METHOD IN |#.: fst “There are two men | eoters in that house,” DENTISTRY — "tie “is “toetr grave They have a wooden cross made Missing teeth are replaced by|roughiy of two sticks on the The Ohio Method by artificial teeth | ground beside the hole that are natural as your original| These two boys seem centuries teeth. Examinations are now be-| old; they do not smile or even ap-| ing conducted without charge, and| pear interested as I photograph estimates are furnished in all cases.|them, as boys might have done. | 2:05 p. m-—The second battery lis working like the first, They are the same size how!tzers. Early | |this morning, before daylight, a oon 8 Russian shrapnel almost “found” ‘th them. They show us the hole in 5 the earth. It is four feet deep and twelve feet in diameter, For many 4 feet around the ground {s plowed ip by skipping pieces of flying metal Priest Grants -- $1 Up| Absolution to Dyirig 50¢| 2:10 p. m-—We come to a chol era hospital along the road, It is in animate men, sick of cholera. | Here {8 a soldier priest, wear ling his army shoes, a Red Cross band on his arm, and a heavy over. coat, He wears a gold-cloth apron ‘over his coat A soldier rises weakly from the straw to his knees. Own your own home. It’s easy. Read the offerings in STAR WANT ADS— then choose. ——@). | pectantly He folds his hands before him and | the priest bends over him. This is absolution for the dying | that this priest is granting. This muttering soldier, who tn still strong enough to kneel upright and to cross himself, probably will be | dead by night, surely by morning. And after the priest goes, the sol dier falls back weakly on the straw pulls a dirty blue handkerchief from his pocket, and sobe out his misery But the Asiatic cholera will have ite way with him before many hours. The priest goes to another man and arouses him. This man seems stronger than the first. Hoe get to his feet, falls on his knees, raises his face ex and hopefully to the churchman, and takes his absotu-| tion without a sign of weakness, | Bat the Red Cross doctors know; when to call the priest | Four hours usually see the finish of the Asiatic cholera victim, and the priest can be called none too soon after the first unfalling symp tom {is discovered. This symptom ts a death sen tence, and these men, lying under the trees in the sunshine, their faces greenish in hue, their eyes closed are dying, ev if some have strength enough left to kneel up- right as the priest blesses them. Most Piteous Thing He Ever Saw T have seen men killed; I've seen men hanged; I've seen men execut ed at the wall, but this sight I have happened upon by accident tn Gall cia is one of the most piteous that the sun could ever shine upon or| WOMEN ONLY What every woman wants {9 a safe and sure cure, not an ex periment. A reliable remedy for all Female Troubles and Irregularities—a friend in need. SANDERSON’S PILLS are all this and more, as thou- sands have testified. Try San derson’s Pills and you will not be disappointed. Take no other Nothing. elae is just as good Circular tree. By mail $2 box or 3 boxes for $5, Every box guaranteed. For sale by Kin sell Bros., Second and Madison, Third and Columbia | Address all letters to RAYMOND REMEDY CO.,, 217% Pike St, Seattle, Wash. McCarron’s Rapid Shoe Repairing Razor Blades Sharpened eaitihe REIDS OF GRINDING hea for Al MOEA MADE TO fend Shoes and Blades by Pareel | working, |Gets Within Range |to the commandant, Foot Troubles iT TH FEET 104 CHERRY ST, AT FIRST AY that a human betng could ever be hold. out and found the Austrian battery. - The shelis dropped in the court-| got the ploture with my camera, | yard of a farmhouse, 300 fect away.| but {t is burned into my mind more} clearly than any film can ever show| Across the road from us was a | camp of hundreds of wagons, horses| it. I'm going to put down the exact|®24 men The sight words, as I wrote them at the mo was indescribable as! ment, while trying to force my stun-| they dashed off toward a hill which ned mind to grasp what I w see had a safe leeway ing. They will show how weak| For 20 minutes the shells fell in words can be our area. First we would hear the “Army priest goes to side of | very distant “burr” of a Russian little white shack, where thre | battery; then would come the |growing shriek of the shells and by my watch, 10 seconds later, somewhere around us there would be a terrific explosion which pro- |duced clouds of intensely biack | smoke. fold their hands as he bende over to hear one confess, Other two await turns with heads bowed. Their faces are terri- bly drawn and ghastly green. They'll be dead by morning, or the priest would not have been called. There is misery un- speakable about the yard. Twelve men are dying under the tr Sunshine dripping on them, With almost their last strength they craw! to their knees, one after the oth- er, as the priest arouses them, and mumble weakly Into his ir. They fall back weakly a the priest straightens up and raises his hands in blessing over them. | salvo, The man nt the phone yelled | more numbers at the commandant, | who fn turn yelled at the 60 men | at the guns. Whether our firing {4 !t or not or whether the Russians lost the range, no one could decide, but as jsuddenly as it began, the Russian fire ceased in our direction, and we ventured out to see what holes the Russian shells had made. We found five holes as large as | cellars and some wounded soldiers, That's the best I can do. but no one had been killed that I've never learned any words that| we could discover. would tell such a story as that, and) — Adams, who has painted emperors and kings, says there fs no brush and paint that oan tell the story on canvas. | “At last, there ts a pteture I can’t} paint,” he sald As for me, I've found a story 1 couldn't write. And above all this the artillery ts booming, and all around soldters are) corrected antly by J, W. 0 cleaning horses, building! tocal potatoes .. bai fires, chopping wood, for the living| Yakima potatoes mnst live and fight as well as the| Cal. sweet potatoes dying must die, One figure under a Ddlanket, unshaved soldier, whom the priest had been unable to arouse, writhed | Cucu! and tossed about The priest hurried over to that corner of the yard and stood with|! outstretched hands and uplifted face, with a Red Cross doctor stand- ing helplessly by his wide, until the writhing ceased with a sudden jerk and the soldier of Austria came to his end. Complete Report of Market Today | Prices Paid Producers for Vegetables Frit 00 Honey, Money, stra al oran: Jap orai 1. lemona per crate | wloriaa of Russian Shells 3:40 p. m. own experiences shells, Col. John and Capt. Miakch had gone with us to the first battery where we intended to say good-bye! when suddenly a shell burst on a hill 260 paces from us We could see the bits of broken shell pdow thelr way ground. Then came salvos of shells Wins We are having our] stay with Kuselan eee eseeessssseseoe 8.00 Prices Pald Producers for Eggs, Poultry, Veal and Pork Mlens, over § Ibe. ......00 over the| tens 4 Ibs. and under .. al, 66 20 120-ID. vee Veal, Jaree Pork, good block hoxs Selling Prices for Butter, Eggs and heese (Corrected Gally by the Bradner Co.) Bene ies Butter tive Washington eamery, brick Opposite Lowman Wachis & Hanford’s ton Post. a long-suffering | WHITE, | Our battery returned salvo after easy BASKETBALL |U, OF 0, ELECTS PLAYS FOR BOYS Boginning continuing | throughout the week, today and |be adopted by the teams of this elty the work of . an conch Watch for the Tho plays are expert Hewe | terial Heayy line shows course of | player; zig-zag line, course of ball; | dotted tine, course of dribble | THE PLAY—Center tips off to |left forward, and he passes to right forward, who Is under the basket, The center runs under | the basket to get the overthrow, if the shot le missed by the right for ward, | MUST FINISH GAME VICTORIA, T jin the 2.—The remain jing seven minutes of the recent | Thistle-Victoria West teams, vut |short on account of » rainstorm, must be played. This was the de cision of the league officials at a special ression ‘SIGN THE “POIPERS” SAN FRANCISCO, | Final papers trans ership of the & Francisco Pa cific Coast league baseball from Frank Ish and Cal E Henry Berry of Los be signed today, announcement |SOULES TURNS PRO VANCOUV 5 Dec. 2—Billy | Soules,:the well-known Northwest | amateur, will make his profession. al debut tonight at the Hastings Athletic club. Soules meets Joha- |ny Clune of Australia, Dec 2.- rring the own- according to an The Star will | | print a series of plays which may | basketball | club | ing to| Angeles will| mouth | “NAN” CORNELL BOSS FOR 1915, EUGEND, | Cornell of Portland was chosen by | of th Unt t captain of the 19 Ore, Dec, 2. in| vote 4 unanimous mono-| gram of Oregon football rhe men aq captainelect is the son of ern Pac Portland school neve rhe for football student team with which played that of Washington high school, Portland. At the end of his inittal year he was chosen cap ta | ance,” as he ts more familiar: | ly called, welghs only 137 pounds. “With ‘every 1 on the squad+ back next id the new captain, “Or hould land top in the want every to keep an eye and with tune should give teams a hard rub for ity first was an race, 1 the squad for new ma ind of for honors AGGIES ALSO ELECT o The ay expressed satis-| of Brewer Oregon Ag football team for CORVALLIS, student body faction Billie as ca The election took place last night FIGHTERS TRY OUT A tryout will be held at the Se attle Athletic club tonight to de termine what boys shall take part r com moker with the Spokane A. A. C. team, set for Dec, 11 DUKE AT IT AGAIN HONOLULU, Dec. 2.-—Duke Ka- hanamoku, the ‘owimmer of Olympic fame, and George Cunha, have left| for Australia to meet the cham-| pions of the Antipodes. DARTMOUTH ELECT: HANOVER, Dec. 2—~The Dart- eleven Tuesday elected John B. McAuliffe its captain for the 1915 season, McAuliffe is a j tac kle and comes from Worcester, | Mass. Ore., Dec. 2 at the aie college election of th EVERETT, Dec, 2—The Everett | | high school authorities have in: vited investigation into the records of its football players, following a charge lodged by Wenatchee that 1 Jones, Everett back, 1s over nd & professional. | Austrians Taking War With Enthusiasm At 5 o'clock it was pitch dark | We went back to the creek and jclimbed tnto our wagon for the re. |turn to Przemysl The reserve men had come down from the hillside where they had | waited all day, and were beginning }to cross the bridge towards the front The white seen among horse that we had| them in the morning was ridden by a young captain with a bristling mustache 6:30 p. -m.—I am back in Prae- mysl. It was my first day of ac- tual battle. | I have seen war at first hand. As for the safety of Przemysl, it | is certain. The Austrian soldier {s taking his war with enthusiasm, and I saw more smiling faces today and | DON'T TAKE CHANCES WITH |THE OPINION OF A DRUGGIST When you are sick, I have people calling upon me every day whose health has been ruined by drug: | gists—and patent slop I will diagnose your furnish your prescriptions FREE Ask for the ex-Government} Physician at the RIGHT DRUG CO. 100 Washington st. FRONT case ana| heard more hearty laughs than Ya} see or hear on the streets of New! | York in a whole month. You can measure the morale of! an army by how much it smiles and by how little it worries, and this part of the Austrian army around Preemys! is not worrying at| all, that I can see. Most of the day the Archduke| Leopold, acting as Inspector of ar-| tillery, was at one end of the line, and I saw shells fall within less than 30 yards of him. WINS HER CASE Syst A, Dec, 2.—Mrs. Clarissa A. Bailey, Seattle, who appeared be- fore the supreme court to argue her case, carried up on appeal from Judge Smith's court, in King coun- ty, has won. Vernon W. Buck, once attorney for Mra. Bailey, re tained two $1,000 securities as his| fee. Mrs. Bailey obtained judgment against him in the lower court. Buck appealed. —_ HAS A FARMER LIST Postmaster Edgar Battle has | printed a st of 89 producers who are willing to sell their article by | parcel post direct to the consumer. |The lists will be given to any one asking for them, DENTISTRY At Cut Prices Until Further Notice. ALL WORK GUARANTEED FIFTEEN YEARS $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown... $10 Gold or Porce- lain Bridge Work Extra Heavy, per tooth $25 Set of Teeth Guaranteed $15 Set of Teeth Guaranteed Solld Gold Fillings Other Fillings OFFICE HOURS: Dally, 9 to 6; Sundays, 10 te 12 BOSTON [CUT RATE } DENTISTS 1420 Second Avenue, Opposite Bon Marche. Bring this ad with you. We guarantes the superiority of the Lundberg Truss, and give free trial to Tul it LUNDBERG CO. Trusses, Deformity Appliances and of Taifiele. Limbs. THIRD AVEN orr PHOTOS Made Now for Xmas JACOBS PHOTO SHOPS P-L Bidg., Seattle. BULL BROS. | Just? Printers 1013 THIRD «AIN 1043 FREE EXAMINATION 22K Gold Crowns...$5.00) Bridgework ........$5.00 Full Set of Teeth... .$5.00) Porcelain Crown. Gold Fillings ... Silver Fillings.... We do exactly as ‘adver Lady Attendant. Terms to suit. All work guaranteed 15 years, ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS tet and Pike, Opp. Public Market Laboring People’s ventists, THE TURKISH BLEND CI GARETTES A great scholar said re distinctive- they we ly i you'll find | Distinctively — Individual them so!

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