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I don't want to give the hemes of the patients in print he next will be om diseases of women after the patient's sys i brought below par jeal operations. K. G. J. NUBRNBERG S517 22md Ave. N. W. with ind was afte We Make a Specialty of Ladies’ Suits French Dr. hiram cleaned , Blankets and Portio y Reasonable Prices, Union Dye Works, Inc. ana . 1428 10th Ay. tod, 609%) Mate #107. - EVERETT-SEATTLE INTERURBAN RAILWAY BATTLE TO 6) HK BTT—Lim: ~ opine am and 62 Limited trains Local Train B,1i-80 46 p.m, ‘on enetia, Oth av reenwood, A D a Greenwoog UTNE ATELM-—Lhralted tratne trains. freight shed at Sixth mm. ‘VenRePreRACTION co. MAY PUT GAME ON SHEL [CROOKED BETTING HURTING BOXING IN BAN FRANCISCO (Ry United Press Leased ‘wWhre) SAN FRANCISCO, March 19. That crooked betting and doubtful refereeing Is having an evil effect in the fight game here and may re- sult in putting boxing in California on the shelf, is the declaration made here today by “Ringsider,’ writing jim the San Francisco Dally News Reviewing the situation, he says “Recent bad decisions. with the fact that a ring of gam bdlers, among them a former member f the notorious Maybray gang, has |made big cleanings on sure-thing |bets, with misleading reports from ltraining camps, have aroused fight | followers to such an extent that the life of the came is theatened, “The Hogan Murphy decision, the | Altell-Murphy cave and the Klaus Petrosky fights are glaring in stances that point to the necessity of some sort of regulation that will protect the public against being ‘bunked.’ ‘A typical instance may be cited in the Kiaus-Petroskey fight. A few days before that fight an ex ;pert on condition—a man well ;known to the local fighting game Daily News to visit Petroakey and make a careful «tudy of his condt- tion, He was iinpressed that some thing was wrong with the sailor, and upon his statement the Daily News informed its readers that Pe (roskey was not ri¢bt. This brought a vigorous denial trom Petroskey handiers. After the fight, Mike Mo- Glare, Petroskey’s trainer, gave the News the following interview “"Five days before the fight Pe troskey was taken |i! with fever and la grippe. We thought he would overcome the attack before the com test but he eptered the ring a sick man! “Many other instances could be cited as they are getting to be the rule rather than the exception. There is only one thing to do, Shelve the betting and the bunk and boxing wit! live. If not, there will be then the boxers will have to go to work.” is neo nine quite like the Cadil- fac nine, and here is what hap- pened to the Cadillacs jast year. With 10 games to play, and only one needed to cinch the pen- nant, they dropped the rag Couldn't take one out of 10 games. Wolgast has never been quite the same since, but he hopes for better things this year. John Altman blew into Dug's office yesterday and reported to Manager Barry in the after. noon. John is Dutch’s big broth. ball player. out to the looks are de one qualifi- all that is required, unfortuna ly, but f he is as good in other departments, Barry wil! be right glad he made his acquaintance. Spike Hennessey is back in town, and has been appointed physical director of the Pastime Athletic ciub, an honor which he carries with appropriate dig- nity. Along about the first of the month, the Pastime club will stage its first smoker. in the meantime Spike will spend his spare moments hurling de- fies to one Johnny O'Leary. Conn i was specially deputined by the) rHE STAR—TUESD SPO ee News _ AND STATISTICS Professional Sports Fostered Edited by ROY WHITMAN AY, MARCH 19 RTS 1912 DOPE AND COMMENT Amateur Sports Encouraged | | | the Shoes of Baker, Collins and the Others—the Foxy Leader of the Athletics Has His Eyes Al- ways on the Future—He Is Building Up Material for Future Years When His Stars “Go Back,” 19, MAC ions is bel the 1 out ved into hence San Antonio, Tex. March ANJ CONNTY world's cle | ing his for paign and picking } who can be de | two or th eanonn / This training trip will his club $14,000 Tha > , in wal to all their player | Bi \ 7 & whole keason 25 years ago. . Mack could have toufed Bouth with his champions " apring and cleared all egpe | Instead, with no Idea of tip | “phenom” to replace a! dar year, he i tolling like the le of @ tailend club to spot theads who, two, three or neanone hence y be qualified for regu lar on bis team. Mack is always planning for years to come, He develops bis own playars, Hoe gota them very young, usually — = out of high schools or colleges, He aims to seoure them before they have bad baseball habits; that ts, false or incorrect methods in batting, throwing, pitching, ote. Mack firet watches a ind's physical fanits He (ries to correet them. If the lad won't listen to advice, off the he goes. His ticket to | minor league reads only one way. Only one man in 11 years ever came back to the club, This le Brie Lord. After caring & player of his false motions, Connie starts to train | him physically and mentally. He coaches the lad on the field and be | seats him near him on the bench during @ gante and explains to the Jad jthe various plays as they come up. Mack next tries him in every position until he finds the one the lad ean play best, Thon he waits for the decline of the vetor a man is needed for a man's Job on the diamond, and t [bas been trained carefully steps into the limefight a finished baseball product. It was so with Collins, Barr, Lapp, Mcluntis, and it will be so with others. Connie uses his own judgment, not that of Others. bench warmer at New York and Detroit, Two years made Thomas a hero of two world’s series. Twice a day Mack meets bis players, They discoss the plays of the game before, They plan the battle that is at hand. Every opposing piteher is put under a magnifying glass, so to speak | Every twirler has certain litte motions which. makes In deliver: ing different Kinds of balls, ‘These are pointed out. It was because a member of the Athletics discovered that Mathewson made a certain} movement with his foot when he pitched bis deadly “fadeaway” that) | the Athletics beat New York when Mathewson was pitching, They beat) | Mathewson, not by hitting (he “fadeaway” or by trying to hit ft, but by jleaving it alone ‘ | | Having culled the youngsters he deems worthy, Connie pute then} | with the veterans Not one of the latter would ever dare attempt to dle- courage a youngster. The star may see his job slipping from bim, but the has an abiding faith in his manager. He knows that Connie ts son - = sagt and still live, turned ont and prac: , feed day after day with the | PULLMAN TO PROTEST “ JACK CONNORS ——{fate"5P"i ines job as 8 oue. Jack Connors, wet! known bigh \legged man in a foot race. Hoe school athlete, who ts now attend: cheerfully scraped up teams to play | ing the University of Washington |the regulars, and when a chance oc and of whom much was expected i curred for a scrub to jump into « athletics for the U.. has again bob echoot game, Garry was rew bed up in the limelight & DT lby being put into the breach and) tested athlete making good He barely earned an | J. Pred Bobier, physical director emblem, and if wax due to earngat lat Pullman, announced after the|neng that he did #0. A hard-w | wrestling matches Friday evenlMe ing follow ke Garry is worth that he would protest against the ig m any day than a fair-w | playing of Connors in any confer-|or star. mea ence games. Connors ts compettug! 4 Training in Air, lfor the shortstop position on Ge) Varsity toam, and as be is one of! Sore CARED, March That prise Gghters of t the classiest In the ent, It ie will do most of their tral pnerally exp paition | is his. Bohler contends, however,| Wil, 10 Mant i. ‘novel. state je here today by Kid M that dack ahowid be profeastooaliz jed and refuses to concede anything | Connors, it will be remembered, | (he American pugilist ce ee tried for @ position on Joo Cobn's that Ding ave poet ge Spokane team summer before last |. or preparing the boxer and traveled with that team oy jhis battles. McCoy made the si pa — “s groand) ment after a fivemile fight monoplane be principally that Bohler will protest Blue Rock Record \his eligibility. Comnors was disbar SAN BERNARDINO, Cal red from high school athletics win- ter before last. | GARRY GETS HIS LETTER 19.—Fred C. Drew of San Berhar By A. Hurwitz dino holds the Pacific coast blue Slim” Garry of the Franklin bas-| rock record today by virtue of hay hetball team ought to be patted onjing broken 195 targets in a@ series back, and with both hands, at/of 200 at the traps of the Urbita This example of bow near a|Gun club here. Drew ran 197 birds hnman being can resemble a crack! without a miss. yf t ‘ the four Thomas was a under Mack ‘\* FOUGHT 3,000 ROUNDS, MADE QUARTER OF A MILLION, BUT GAMBLED IT AWAY, IS PASSING STORY OF ATTELL @eeoeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeege Abe Attell will never fi | if his wife can prevent it The day after Abe lost the cham- plonship to Kilbane she came to \fight headquarters weeping bit. terly . sain |— i] ido his best for the Browns. | of it left now CONNIE MACK. walching out for the future of his mon, and a veteran seldom leaves his|@nd bis performance against V: club without first getting a job as manager of another team. Pitchers E n and Danforth, who were w season; Catcher Exan, Outfielder Maggert, and Salmon, a southpaw fresh from Princetoa, are the men most ikely to be retained from the Present aqu of recruits. Mack bas spent months of effort trying to discover an infielder who can be developed for regular duty some sea- sons hence. In this he ts dinappointed Mack never forces his players in the spring ts never spoken in the training camp. From the first day of the trip to the last, every man thinks most of ‘one thing—batting. . Other teams, when they start to practice, begin by tossing the ball around Mack's men grab 4 bat a» soon os they step on the Seld, and they whack the horsehide until y are tired. Batting comes first, even the pitchers being compelied to swing the “war stick” as much as the feiders The word “weight” . . THE SECRET OF CONNIE MACK'S SUCCESS There is an expression, “Connie Mack iuck.” It ls shouted when ever Connie springs a new star. Kt inn't eek, It's bard work It's perseverance. It's careful selec- ton of players and patient teaching. It's prudent handling of the raw material. It's weeks, months and yoars of preparation. It's a constant, never-ending effort to be prepared always for the day when a star begins to go back. NAP TWIRLER HAS LARGEST HANDS OF ANY BIG LEAGUER Big “Bil” James, the glant Nap twirler, possesses the largest lunch grabbers of any player In the major oague The ordin looks much ike the p pow n clasp. 64 in Bill's Iadylike mitt, Ho ts one, of the few players who have broken |inte the big leagues who have been able to make their fingers meet around the regular ized ball. Joe Jackson, with a huge black The only player, at least in recent bat of a model named tn his honor, yoars, who rivaled James in having | has joined the Clevelands at Mo- the biggest mitt in captivity |bile, If correctly quoted tn inter- Ables, the husky southpaw, wholviews, the bold batsman ts badly once belonged to the Cleveland } up,” for, after declaring | lad | “swelled and later to the Yankees, but who Cobb to be the greatest player now draws his expense money from |in the game, he goes on to discuss the Const league, |his own chances of outranking the While James’ extra sized glove/«peedy Tiger as batsman, run-get- fillers might be considered an axsot|ter, baserunner and outfielder of in baseball and while playing the | 1912, piano, as they allow bim to cover! two octaves without effort, they | have on occasions proved rather in | who ga the way. When Bill uses the ordi-|bian league franchise. nary sized finger bow! he is com-| what they expect me to do with the pelled to bathe one finger at a time, | pesky thing?” says Cap. Instead of pursuing the usual cus tom from the nearest source of supplies. There's nothing doing.” George Stovall has killed all re ports of a holdup by reporting to Wallace and assuring him be will . oe The first player that Harry Wol- verton gave his walking papers to was none other than Jack Chesbro, | who was the kingpin heaver of his * \time, Chesbro asked for a chance @|to come back, which Wolverton | would have given him had he not |been loaded down with pitchers. |To carry Chesbro meant an extra expense and Wolverton felt that there was only a bare chance of Jack's making good, | He wagn't sounding the long roll, you know. Merely stating a fact. A little later he recollected that his ring career had netted him some thing more than $200,000, Not much | Sid Smith, the catcher raliro , | Success Of @ ruse for getting around While not exactly a criticism, we must remark that Danie! E. Dugdale is a trifie given to v lancies- For instance, he is cocksure Wally, Barren. camp and a few others from the east are going to burn this league up. We hope so, but th made their records in league not up to the standard of the Northwest. if these two gents get out on the local jot and cut up like real ball players, it will be a whole fot more to the “I can't stand Abe beng beaten up this way,” she sobbed. If he} | > fight with Tommy Murphy | step into the set and he doesn't listen to his] and quit the ring, it will be n of ® year or #0 be-| will force him to Howes jhe n shall e the Murphy fight Abe is one of the most remark-| f the day fighters. \He was a wonder at the scientific point than a bushel of dop |game, a man who made a quarter | Wally, however, has a dandy jor 4 million im cash, yet who has record, and so has Barrencamp, |iittie of it today, a gambler and But It's no cinch they're going [piunger as well, but im all else @ to do here what they did back |ciean liver. He never smoked or| there. Dug is sure one grand | rank optimist. | He | hap Attell Lost $5,000 champ! (By United Prowse Leased Wire) [in the ring, and has defended his NEW YORK, March 19.—Abe At-|title every time a 122 pound man tell lost $5,000 betting himself | could get the offer of a purse. He| }in his recent fights on coast/has been whipped just five times. with Johnny Kilbane and Tommy|He has fought perhaps 3,000 rounds Murphy, according letters re-jin all, and until! the Murphy fight | ceived here today by a friend of|did not bear a thark where a glove the little serapper. “I think I was|touched him, He learned how to entitled to @ draw with Kilbane,”| yiunge, and——hardest of all—he has Attell wrote, “but I have nothing to tried to learn how to quit plunging. say in regard to the bout with “It's been a pretty good game,’ sige i He had too much weight! no eaid, reilectively, the day before | the Murphy fight. “Of course, 'm kind of sore when I think of al! the | money I've let go away from me but I can console myself. Cm just as good as I ever was, and I've had} a mighty good thine. |, “I was born on of present fought 260 time He has fought more} ns than any other man now has more. per- Chicago Fans Jubilant CHICAGO, March 19. fans are jubilant today Chicago over the Washington's | ago,” said he, named me for anth-prize fight ordinances through the issuance of “gymnasium class | birthday, 26 years privileges” Instead of admission|"and my mother tickets. The proprietor of a boxing| Abraham Lincoln, . academy was acquitted of a charge| ‘Four of us began together in san | of conducting a prize fight on his | Francisco. There were Jimmie Britt defense that none but members of |and Eddie Hanlon and Frankie Neil | his “gymnasium claus” were per-|and myself. We were all kids to- mitted to see the bout. The verdict | getl fighting preliminaries about means that a number of matches|the same time, The others are all will now be held in Chicago, say the |done for now. I’m the only one fans, that’s left in the ring.” ABE ATTELL v “I was a good, saving kid until 1 met Young Corbett in Denver, He taught me to parley my money, I’ never made any bets until I caught up with him. He made a plunger out of me. Well, good o1 I bet ‘em as high as any while it lasted. Now I'm through. No more betting for me.” And it was not with the slightest jevidence of emotipn that he told the of the biggest bet he ever jmete on a horse-—and he was a \nkilled pony chaser. It was at the |Empire City track, and Senator Pat leader of the Brooklyn ‘acy, Was still alive. Attell fighting for ways with succe bank roll “I got a tip to play Prince Armor,” aid, “Prince Armor. I'll never ot name, I w "t going |to do it, when I saw McCarren go to it, I saw him bet $26,000 on Prince Armor—and I thought that if it was good enough for him it was good enough for me. So I went in $11,000, And we were just nosed out of the money. On the level, that finish was just like this. Tt was a frame, all right been sure of that, It was all framed up for us to win. But the horse jthat was to have got off in front jgot so far ahead that the boy jcouldn’t set him back, and Prince jArmor fost by a nip. My $11,000 was gone. “That made me mad. I thought \U'd get it back, and I lost $30,000 more in three days. Then | went to a and made book—and I MO more. When I got away from there I had my wife's |Jewels in soak. That was enough }for me. I told her that I never | would play again, Why, we were ao ipoor that 1 ow between fights. All { made in three or four years was cleaned up, but 1am wise now, They'll not do it again, Tam through,” stor 8, and had a neat T have he sure made a| montha, al-| i for our board bill | by Cleveland to Columbus, is knock- ing the Naps. He says Hohnhurst can't hit a lefthander with a plank, that Gregg will blow up, and that Jackson was only a flash. Welltaid plans sometimes fall. Youngstown, in the Ohio-Pe vania league, had James Mc. then with Washington, draft two of its good men in Beott and Sheer, it is said, to keep class A clubs from getting them, expecting Med turn them back. But now is at Washington and he says he will keep the men for tryouts, and| if they fail to make good, dispose of them to the best advantage. | A serious attack of blood poison- ing prevented Shortstop Al Brid- well from leaving to join the Bos- ton Nationals. Bridwell stepped on a nail a week ago while at work on jhis new garage in Portsmouth, 0, Although the point ran through his foot, he gave little concern to the injury. Now his physician says the \case is & dangerous one and will |keep Bridwell at home at least a fortnight The Bothwell baseball team has organized for the coming season and lin and Manager | Wash. around Seattle. George Briggs, Address Loveras Want Games. One of the strongest teams that | has been organized so far this sea. | son is the Loveras. Nate Druxt- man is arranging their schedule and | would like to hear from teams in or around Seattle, The following well- | Known local boys will be seen in the Loveras’ line-up: — Infield—McGill, | Chesterfield, Druximan and Mashin. ter, Tom Clark will do the catch- ing, while McDonald, Hayes and Bexwell will take care of the pitch- ing end. For games address Nate Druximan, care Schwabacher Bros, | would like to hear from fast teams | y Mack Trains World’s Champs | He Works the Whole Year ‘Round to Bring His Likely| _ Recruits Up to Standard so They Can Step Into| the team part of last | sans down with three lonely singles |kell declared that he would finish | | |MCAREY AFTER. WOLGST OMITS OFFER THAT CAUSES |, TOM JONES TO LAUGH |p (Ny United Press Leased Wire) 108 ANGELES, March 19 Rivers-Wolgast mateh for the ligh weight title is squarely up to th champion today Following bis defent of Jac White last Saturday, Rivers for tw days considered proyospis to mee Wolgast, and today hit Joe Levy, formally announced tha Rivers is ® challenger for the title and named July 4.4% the mont ac ceptable date for @ bétile. Levy agreed to make the a pounds ringside, Woigast is playing a thea engagement in Beattie this week was stated that Tom would wire him today a forma for the match Job for Pitcher (By United Press Leseea Wire) 108 ANGELE March 19.—If] Don Haskell, Uni ity of South ra California pitcher, will leave bis books and enter the professional! ranks, he can sign 4 contract with! either Vernon or Los Angeles. This! 18-year-old lad for # year has watched by the league manag A weight non Friday, when he let the Yanni cemented their regard for him. Has his college course before cousider ing offers. Questionable Decision (Ny United Press Leased Wire) KNOXVILLE, Tenn., March 19 Jous Westergaard, the lowa wrest- ler, today has a questionable de- elsion over Dr. B. F. Roller of Se attle in their catchascateh-caa wrestling match here last night. After 40 minutes of wrestling with out a fall, the men fell through} the rope Dr. Roller waa slightly | injured and unxble to continue, the Teferee awarding the match to| Westergaard i Ask Your Doctor A Blood P; Ask your doctor fa medicine, like Ayer'’s rilla, is not vastly alcohol than with A feat bee At AM 1, hes 10 t from laborwtar Li Crunaint cannot supple rue dealer 88 Ramp gd Mewart Sulphur te, —— Seat, ae me a “REPAIRING WHI YOU WAIT” Seattle Bothell, | acted: future reference. Business Direct | No matter what your needs may be, you w i |them enumerated in this Directory—Cut out and paste in a convenient place CHATTEL LOANS OPTICIANS A. D. 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