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San Antonio light and gazette. [volume] (San Antonio, Tex.) 1909-1911, June 27, 1910, LAST EDITION, Image 9

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86090238/1910-06-27/ed-1/seq-9/

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The Man
With a Far
' can see money in Terrell Well property. Me sees
a rare opportunity to make a few dollars build him
an old-age competency. So many men there are
who can't see beyond today. That's why so many
have no home when they get past the work-line.
Terrell Well property is just as certain to grow
into money as that night succeeds day. It has the
famous Radium Water back of it.
If a man will go out there to the tents and see
the marvelous cures it is making he will easily un
derstand why San Jose lots are selling so fast. Live
people appreciate the value of a model town like
San Jose, and the privilege of living where the great
est healing water in the world flows at their very
% feet. Think what it means.
You live in a model town—one laid out and
built on the most modern plan, with wide streets,
concrete walks, shade trees, best of hotels and bath
houses, sanitariums, schools and churches. Add to
this the finest climate in the world.
Now then, if you should get sick with neural
gia. asthma, rheumatism, gout, liver or stomach
trouble—or even become afflicted with diabetes or
Bright's disease, you have a sure cure at your very
door—the Terrell Well Radium water.
Buy a lot, make your home in San Jose and
enjoy these advantages. *
TerrellWellCo.
A. D. POWERS,
General Sales Manager
Gibbs Building.
CROWDS FLOCK TO
CAMP OF FIGHTERS
Keno, Nev., June 27.—The sun is hot
al Reno. Its torrid rays beat down on the
spectators with almost tropic intensi
ty. Also there is dust. It lies thick
and finely powdered on roads that
lead to the rival fight camps, and the
procession of plunging automobiles
constantly journeying to and fro whirl
it to mix with the blue haze of the
encircling hills.
But neither the heat nor the dust
seems to be troubling either the black
; :
r BUGGIES AND WAGONs\
STOVES. PAINTS, HAKDWABE
OVR PRICES ARE LOWE!
\HND*BEOB6E HARDWARE CO. .
tIMH Miliury Flaw f
Ghe
St. Anthony
ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF
SAN ANTONIO’S NEWEST
AND FINEST HOTEL
MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL.
No Bettor or More Complete Hotel ot
Its Size (430 rooms) in America
Liberally Conducted on the
EUROPEAN PLAN
Special Attention Paid to
Commercial Mea.
F. M. SWEARINGEN A SON,
Managing Directors.
Sabinal’s Leading Hotel
THE MITCHELL HOUSE
Special Attention to
Traveling Men.
■ — ■ '■ ' ■ " ■
Ghe Gunter |
EUROPEAN PLAN $1.50 AND UP
550 ROOMS 225 WITH BATH
Largest and most commodious rotunda in the South. In addition to ala carte
service we specialize LUNCHEON, 12 to 2 p. m., 50 cents.
TABLE D'HOTE DINNER, 6 to 8 p. m., $l.OO
LOrcheetral Concerts. THE GUNTER HOTEL
MONDAY.
«
Vision
or white giants, who a week from to
day, are to meet in a conflict that has
riveted on it world wide attention and
is luring to the Nevada town eager
patrons from the four corners of the
earth.
Yesterday was like a circus day in
the average American town, but there
were two show grounds, the eamps of
[the fighters. Reno is fast filling up
with the vanguard of the fight erowri
and every train brings its quota of
visitors and the number of arrivals are
expected to increase steadily from now
' until the Fourth. The main invasion
i it is thought, will begin on Friday.
JOKERS DEFEAT CUBS.
The Jokers and the Cubs played a
‘ fast games yesterday on the Joker’s
I diamond, the Jokers winning bv the
score V>f 7 to 5. The feature of the
game was the batting rally of the
Jokers in the ninth inning. The bat
teries: Jokers! E. Cooke, Kindfather
and Black; for Cubs, Melcher and But
ler.
HOTEL
LONGACRE
47th treet, Ju»t Off Broadway,
NEW YORK CITY.
EXCLUSIVELY BACHELOR.
Convenient to Everything.
ABSOLUTELY FIRE PROOF
Library, billiard ball and
restaurant in connection.
All Rooms Handsomely Furnished.
75 ROOMS $1 PER DAY.
100 Rooms with private bath
•and shower.
51.50 PER DAY.
50 Rooms with private bath
and shower.
|2 PER DAY.
Manager.
/ HOTEL
VAN CORTLAND
WEST 49th ST., NEAR B’WAY.
N. Y, CITY
A hieh-dass fireproof hotel in the
। centre of the eity and in the heart of
the theatrical district.
Booms, use of bath.
♦1.60 per day.
Rooms with bath 12 per day.
Alt rooms large, airy and hand
somely furnished. Exceptionally coo!
in summer.
HIGH CLASS RESTAURANT AT
MODERATE RATES.
BOOKLET UPON APPLICATION
SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE
JEFF’S BACK DEVELOPMENT
A photograph taken at the Reno on day of Jeffries’ arrival shows the great
condition of the boiler-maker'for the big battle with Johnson.
There is no superfluous weight on his his back and arms and the muscles
stand out in bunches all over his body. w
CALENDAR OF SPORTS FOR THE WEEK.
Monday.
Glidden tour run from Kansas City to Omaha, 213.3 miles.
Opening of annual tournament of Devon Polo chib at Devon, Pa.
World’s aviation meet at Montreal.
Opening of Cedar Valley Circuit race meeting at Mason City, la.
Opening of Middle States cliampie nship tennis tournament at Orange
N. J. '
Opening of Tennessee State »ham pionship tennis tournament at
Knoxville.
Tues day.
Glidden tour run from Omaha to Des Moines. 159 miles.
Opening of Lake Erie Trotting Circuit meeting at Newcastle, Pa.
Wednesday.
Glidden tour run from Des Moines to Davenport. 219.8 miles.
Boat race between the Harvard and Yale second fours at New Lon
don, Conn.
California state championship tennis tournament opens at San Fran
cisco.
Massachusetts open golf tournament begins at Oakley.
Michigan Short Ship circuit race meetiug opens at Flint.
Annual shooting tournament of the Canadian Indians begins at
Niagara on-the-Lake.
Thursday.
Glidden tour ends with run from Davenport to Chicago, 179.7 miles.
Annual Yale-Harvard boat races on the Thames river at Now lx?ndon,
Conn.
Start of -60 mile tour of the Blue Grass Motor club of Lexington, Ky.
Raising of the National league championship pennant at Pittsburg.
Opening of Canadian Racing association meeting at Fort Erie.
Friday.
Opening of the Empire rifle competition at Bisley.
Opening of annual bench show of the Toronto Kennel club.
Opening of aunual race meeting of the Manitoba Jockey club at Win
nepeg.
Dominion championship bicycle races begin at Waterloo, Ont.
Saturday.
Annual motor boat race from New York City to Albany and return.
Big professional Marathon race at Celtic park. New York.
Annual reliability run of the Wildwood Automobile chib, Philadel
phia.
Opening of three days’ automobile race meeting at Los Angeles.
Opening of three days' aviation meet at Aurora. 111.
Opening of Illinois Valley circuitrace meeting at Chicago.
English intercollejriate athletic championships at London.
Cruise of the American Yacht club from Newburyport to Marblehead,
Mass.
Minister hands hoi
SHOT TO RENO. NEV.
Chicago Clergyman Declares
Government Should Prevent
All Ring Battles.
Chicago, June 27. —Nevada was bit
terly denounced last evening by Rev.
Melbourne I’. Boynton, in the Lexing
ton Avenue Baptist church, for permit
ting the staging of the Jeffties-John
son tight at Reno, on Independence
Day. His subject was “Nevada’s
Shame. ’’
i “It is Nevada's shame that she lacks '
j men of brain and brawn who emiM pr - I
teet her against herself and make her J
desert's to blossom as the rose,’’ said'
j Mr. Boynton.
“Her masters have taken a course
I that promises to keep Nevada an unin
; habited desert for many years.
“There should be some way by which
our nation could recall the charter of a I
। state that has become a desert and a i
| moral menace. Nevada has no right to [
I remain a part of our nation with the 1
full powers of a state. Nevada should |
become a territory and be governed j
from Washington in such a fashion as |
Ito present the rest of the republic
I against the international shame that is
‘ now ours because of this monstrous !
i evil of the prize ring.
I “One such prize fight sets back our j
[citizenship many generations. Some pow I
|er of the national government should
find the means of enjoining the news- i
[ papers, the railroads, the postoffiee, I
| the express companies from advertis- |
Jing or promoting the interests of prize t
fighting in atty way whatsoever. It
; would seem that the postal authorities
। had this right now and could throw- out
; all mail matter that refers Io the prize i
। fight, just as they punish all persons I
who use the mails for lotteries and I
other improper schemes.”
Amep.ican*association.
At Milwaukee: Milwaukee, 7; Louts- I
ville, 3.
At Kansas City: First game, Kansas
City, 11; Indianapolis. 5. Second game,
i Indianapolis. 3: Kansas City 6.
At Minneapolis: First game, Minne
i a polis, 4; Toledo, 5 (ten ininngs). Sec
ond game, Minneapolis, 0; Toledo, 2
(six innings).
At. St. Paul: First game, St. Paul,:
4; Columbus. 0. Second game, St. Paul, [
' 8; Columbus, 1, (
Jimmv Williams and “Kobe’’ Ferris
are going at such a speed in Minneapo
lis that it is hinted that Owner Hodges
of the Browns is willing to pay good
money for the return of the two old
boys to St. Louis.
THE FAMOUS
Burdette Mineral Water
AND
BURDETTE SPLITS
FOB SALE AT THE FOLLOWING
PLACES:
M. M. HEWGLEY. Olfic« Bar, 216 East
Houston Street.
JIM STEVENS, Riverside Bar, E. Hous
tou Street.
C R BASSE, Bismarck Saloon, Alamo
Plaza.
M. L. MASSEY, 310 West Commerce St.
ARTHUR J. GAUL 122 West Commerce.
F BIANCHI, 126 South Pecos Street.
ANTON M. JVDMAIEB, 217 NacoadJ
lB3l North
Mores Street.
J D PULLIAM, 1528 Grayson Street.
2 G LUCAS, Mission Drug Store, 72.’
‘South Alamo Street
&UNTLR HUTLU BAR.
MERGER HOTEL BAK.
BEXAR HOILL BAK.
H (’ KING 331 Uedro Avenue.
\ U ELEIsON, 733 South Alamo St
j C. HOVEL & SONS, Kurth Flore* St.
and Mistletoe Ave.
LAUREL. BLIGH IS IHAKMACY, 133
GROCERY CO.. 135
SUNNY corner Houston
and Njverro Street*.
-t.F T\V* STIETH CENTURY DRUG
STORES.'--- H Houston St. and 141
wm' ‘kaiae'er's DRUG STORE.
Cor. Houston and Losoya Streets.
2 BROTHERS' BARS, 213 Crockett bt.
nid 119 Houston.
nvn 1 Uli: 645 Nast Commerce St.
HrvßY HOECK.E, 319 East Houston St.
STEVE VACCAREZZA, 226 South Con-
R.OOHN I VO., 908 W. Commerce St.
ST ANTHONX HO ILL.
WAGNER'S DRUG STORE.
RAY *L4MBLRT’S SALOON. Sap Depot.
Cl 1003 E. Commerce.
T D CAM I TO2 Starr St.
AUGUST LIMBURGER. 501 W. Com-
SIURP a’pIVEHS, 102 Wilson.
KLAUS C. GROC. A SAL., 2202 New
Braunfels Ave. _
MIKE KUBAN. Saloon, E. Com St.
Anton Kuimn. Saloon. 413 W. Houston
Str
CHAS. K. BOSSHARDT, Branch Saloon,
E. Houston Str. ,
HENRY 6TUECK. Farmers Saloon, 410
K. Com. Str.
JOHN REEDY. 308 Navarro.
MANHATTAN BAR. 335 Alamo Plaza.
Finest Water in the World lor
Malaria, Indigestion, Kidney
and Stomach Troubles
B LE. N D
CIGARETTES
You don’t take any
chance in buying them.
Their mellow flavor is the
result of consummate skill x
exercised in blending the
splendid tobaccos. A trial
is the best argument.
An inexpensive package makes
possible ten additional Cigarettes.
Pictures of popular actresses now
packed with Fatima Cigarettes
20 "for cents
ONCE POPULAR RED COAf IS
NO LONGER USED BY GOLFERS
London, England, June 25. —Golfing
costume is no longer the gaudy affair
it was in the old days. There are thoss
who still cling to the bunched laco
shoes at the instep, designed to keep
the dew off in the early morning play,
but apparently the red coat is not to
endure like the coat of the huntsman.
The extinction of the red coat came
so gradually that it is now rather dif
ficult, in looking backward, to assign
any apparent reason for it. Some of its
unpopularity may be due to the fact
that clubs, not content with a simple
red, insisted upon facings of various
and glaring colors and buttons bearing
elaborate designs. Not only was the
coat often made hideous, but, by the
dint ot all this unnecessary fuss, it be
came also ridiculous.
There was —long enough ago for it to
he now almost forgotten —a vague feel
ing that a player should attain a cer
tain standard before blossoming into
scarlet; enthusiastic beginners would
declare that as soon as they could go
round under 100 —a rarer feat then
than it is today—they really would buy
a red coat. The small Eton boy who
ecstaticaly casts away his “scug” cap
of ugly blue and black stripes for hi.
first “color” may well be pardoned if
he exaggerates the importance of the
occasion, but a stout, middle-aged per
son toiling and moiling round the links
with the object of wearing a coat of
one color rather than of another is a
cause for legitimate mirth.
Possibly, if the standard required by
the unwritten law had been a high one,
the absurdity would not have been so
patent, since many grown men are, at
the bottom of their hearts, by no means
unsusceptible to the variety of colors.
As it was. however, just as the number
of beginners steadily increased, so did
the custom of wearing a red coat fall
steadily into disrepute.
Golf is retjly almost the only game
in which there is any considerable lati
tude for the personal predilections of
the player in the matter of clothes. A
cricketer might be privately of opinion
that he would feel more at his ease in
knickerbockers, but he would be a bold
man to appear so attired at Lord’s or,
indeed, on any but the more primitive
of village greens.
The golfer, on the other hand, owes
scarcely any obedience ‘to custom; he
has cast from him the only garment
which savored' of a uniform,, and can
please himself. Consequently, he has
ample scope for developing opinions,
sometimes highly fantastic, as to what
garments do and do not enable him to
hit the ball.
There is one man occupying a promi
nent position in the golfing world. wh9,
*n the morning of a match, deliberately
arrays himself in a white shirt with
a large and adamantine front aud. in |
[addition, the tallest collar he can find. ।
‘ Nor is this player unique; for there was
a few years ago a golfer who came I
within an ace of representing his uni- [
[ versity and invariably adopted the
same attire, with the modification that
on the bitterest winter day he would I
take off his cyat and play in snowy I
shirtsleeves.
To most golfers a stiff shirt would |
be sheer agony, and they would declare
it to be impossible to take more than
the very shortest of swings. Yet the
man referred to, although no longer
what Sir Walter Simpson would have
described as a “swank youth.’’ ap
pears to have no difficulty in executing
[a full swing, and. indeed, according ts
! his own account, only manages to keep
l.is swing within bounds by this rather
drastic regulation of his attire.
Those players who dress themselves
! with the set purpose of curbing exuber
[ mice of movement are few indeed com
pared with those who are forever seek
iing the maximum of freedom; but the
I former have uot a little wisdom on
। their side. Walter De Zoete. an occur
[ate golfer, who plays all too seldom
! nowadays, used always to tie a silk
handkerchief ns tightly as possible
round his waist when playing in a high
wind, in the belief that the feeling oi
restraint enabled him to keep bis body
still.
This is an admirable theory if this
feeling of restraint does in fact induct
a restrained method of hitting. Even
brace:: present an insupo.’ablj obstacle
to flit -proper hitting of the ball with
many golfers; but this must be attrib
utable largely to the imagination, nn
less, indeed, the'Traces be of a most
•rigid ant! unrelenting type.
Furnish Your House
ON EASY FAYMENTS.
Hendricks 4 Fenstermaker
Furniture 4 House Furnishers
SELLS FOR LESS.
113 tnd 116 Main Atenna.
THE SAN ANTONIO LOAN & TRUST CO.
(INCORPORATED WITHOUT BANKING PRIVILEGES)
Acts as Trustee, Executbr or Guardian
M 4.38% SuNTS
— ilWw AubuUNlo
‘ DIRECTORS
GEO. W. BRACKENRIDGE. PRESIDENT.!
Leroy G. Denman. Vice President. Edwiu Chamberlain, 5 ice President
M. E. Brackenridge. Dr. Ferd. Herff Sr.
Mrs. Caroline Kampmann. Thos. B. Palfrey.
Mrs E. A. Stribling. Chas. A. Zilker.
WM. L. HERFF, SECRETARY AND TREASURER.
SAN ANTONIO
KERR VILLE
JUNE 27, 1910.
PECK TEAM WILL
PLAY AT FLORESVILLE
The players of the L. P. Peck team
arc requested to meet at the corner of
Duval and Hackberry street at 8
o ’clock sharp, to make final arrange
ments for their game at Floresville,
Wednesday, June 29. The foliowring
will make the trip: Armond. Hunnel
Woods, Ackerman. Crevenstoin, Micke),
Rentz. Jennet. York. Trinkc and Wel
ten, J. Boubel. E. Boubel, L. Bou be!
and P. Taubert.
The 8. P. Rip Track and Alamo Iron
Workers met on the Post diamond yes
terday, the S. P. Rip Track team win
ning by a score of 9 to 5. The fea
ture of the game was the pitching of
John Woerner for the Alamo Iron
Workers) who struck out fifteen men.
Score: •*
8. P Rip Track 510 010 002— 9
A. 1. W 010 200 110— 5
Batteries: S. P. Rip Track, Weber
and Chas. Weber; .Hamo Iron Workers,
Rodriguez and Woerner.
' % s
TmCahof Exclusivness
See SidneyM.Weis
RIP TRACK TEAM WINS.
9

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