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THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1912 KIDNEY f “BO ‘G 7 ea | © AND BASEB L EY TROUBL BOX 1N G|" News ANI SPORTS DOPE AND FOOTBALL : CAUSES LUMBAGO!| 8 Swine | socheiona: soni Totines Kites by ROY WHITMAN anator spore tncurages || BASKETBALL | | ‘ixiibaaag ° rene WANTS ] A Y: BALL'S VET IS 45 YEARS OLD ‘| * _ ‘ISREADY” —* Y cannot refrain from writing to eeeeereeeeeeseoses! eee eee eeeeeeeeeeeSeeeeeTeeeeeeeeeFeFEHeHeeee my NIGE OFFER Jack Gleason Wants New Yorker for Coast Bouts. that your Swamp-Root has ited me greatly, Last year | A severe attack of lumbago. ‘las bad for a long time, and on Seeing your advertisement I deter ined to give it @ trial. 1 did so Qnd in two weeks was cured. | @ave & bottle toa ir woman who gould rooly walk. She came to @e in four days to tell me she was r KILBANE McCarey Would Corner Champ Market Feather NEW YORK, March 20-—Knock out Brown in today considert jtempting offer made bins LOS ANGELHS, March 20,—Tom MoCarey Is waiting today for an answer to his telegram to Johony most thankful. I had ; - ; tne a oan last November and | Kilbane, offering the featherweight | Comaeon, oe Sener See Pb oo - #o bad that I could not rise | champion a lump sum of $50,000 for a ion oe the Coan my chair without assistance |his services and those of his man | Gleason wants Brown to box Fred ager, Jimmy Dunn, for two years. could searcely lace up my . 1 at once sent for more p-Root and after taking two IT am more than glad that die Welsh, Abe Attell and Joe Riv ors, staging the first of these bouts on Decoration day, Gleason wit nessed the two bouts in Philadel McCarey stated today that should Kilbane accept, he would be requir. ed to moet Abe Attell in a return match, and also to meet any other Fred Weed looks ike a race ae Eoeca yg . hia, when Brown defeated Matty |/horve, He was out at the ball lot ST ee eatakes af teony.| shows elect, Furthermore, there Hatdwin and young Herwe,"and was |youterday afternoon, apd, me tar as | h , uch impressed wit young | weight goes, at leas is down Bosc" YourTeNny SEAI Sek cvtnn yisture prapeottions: x lightweight as drawing card for|mid-season form. While, of course ee ae tk sake ate orem expects: bis Pacific coast fans he was feeding only on straight sight. The promoter expects bis reply before night NOTHING DOING CLEVELAND, Ohio, March 20.-- Johnay Kilbane wired a refusal to day to an offer by Tom MeCarey of BO Center St. Little Rock, Ark. Letter to a mton, M. ¥. ve What Swamp-Reot Wil! Do For Vou. Send to Dr, Kilmer & Co, mion, N. ¥., for a sam- tle. It will convince anyone. will also receive a booklet of information, telling all the kidneys and bladder. writing, be sure and mention R. Regular fitty-cent and lar size bottles for sale at stores, BULL BROS. dust Printers 1013 THIRD AVENUE MAIN 1043 __ IND. 5200 Los Angeles, offering him $50,000 4 flat for his exclusive services for pe BS ai two years, “Not enough money, Pion wean said Kilbane, in discussing the of) 4. i eek. fer. “Besides, | wouldn't tle myself unity betes up for two yoars to any one. Tes’ action ee cY YOUNG He ie 45 yours old He has been « big league pitch or for 22 year Second Week. Haths and road work He dresses in men who will wear uniforms of flannels and sweater, and does 10 to 16 miles on Unofficial an ie mad today by Manager Long of some o He « or pares himself for the season He spends a San Francisco Seals during Cb coming season, They are Jobn son, outfielder; Corhan, third base; | the road. MeArdie, shortstop. Mohler, second He tramps, base; Jackson, third base; Gedeon,| # prints month at Hot sud infielder; Aner Berry, | climbs bills, Springs before catchers, and Miller, Fanning, +: 9 8%, going to the train- Noyes, Meikle and Baker, pitchers. He dees net - . Other men will be added from time |towch a baseball. to time to the list, which is subject dite} to change during the two weeks re] Third Week. He = continees a ee en Aa see work, Dillon Making Weight Ties ane SAN FRANCISCO, March 20.—|toages the ball, Jack Dillon, the Indianapolis mid He handies dleweight, whose real name is Price | bunts to reduce and who was born in Cornwall, an-| bis stomach, nounced today that he ts down to ee his 20-round contest t the camp. He drinks one xiass of whiskey @ day while trata. eT “tie works slow. ly and deliberate ly each spring un Ul bis weight ts reduced and he ean pitch his faat ball withont wrenching bis muscles tipa the beam at 160, which means Ht, that he will have no difflewlty in making 168 pounds at 10 o'clock Saturday morning. Both men are working hard, going through road work in the morning and gymna- sium work and boxing each noon. .Both are deciared to be in condition, and « red-hot scrap is expected when the two mid- dleweights come together. Portland Livestock Show PORTLAND, Or, March 20.—The Edwin J. Brown, D. D. 8./attendance at the Northwest Live : was y aie the la imspust ot the eer “The show| CY Young, baseball's most inter today was featured by the selling esting veteran, has gone to Avgue of the breed stock. The Intund Em jta, Ga. to join his teammates of/and sprints mile after mile, untfijhow he knows when the moment CY YOUNG WINDING UP IN PRACTICE Photograph Taken at Hot Springs Imtiate Wak. pire visitors again were in attend-lthe Boston Nationals at their train.| "tiefied thet legs and wit are | arrives, but be just naturally begins ance tm large numbers at the show, right. All this time be Bot |to speed them across, and perbaps STATE ‘AL WAR which is the most successful ever ing camp. He has completed his " * to pat “something on the ball” at held in the Morthwest. Many of ™onth’s preliminary training a them also passed much of the time) Hot Springs and Is ready to com} yey baths and road work, but the|Bever hear of Cy Young complatn- in Individual sight-seeing. pete with the youngsters for a place |jatter ix down somewhat, for|ini of a sore arm or reached inisiaue Cyganiewicz on the pitehing staff. his wind f# good and hin muscles | Sack, ag many youngsters ene eee How ae Cy Young te 46 years old, and te|*PPl©. But he adds fielding and) When Young started this year he o iH omé a handi- | inst starting his 22rd consecuttve| eae the ball around to his pro- @idu't bave a suspicion of a walet cap itke that? No wrestler inthe He plays the infield in a world could pronounce such a name twice within any given hour, No wonder he is so for- In the third week Young nentig.| (he correct time. The result is you Mine. It was more ast pact like @ round earues coaner, fe the maior tively manner, All this timedte-|house. Now he certainly does look | leagues. Cy ie as youthful as any reeruit. wearing heavy flannols, and prot-jgood. He is carrying very little! er ee ee |surpine In his mid section, and the| now than many a 28 ably a sweater younger, y © player 20 yoars|Abl % swoaier. work he is dotng ought to remove by the hout This, midable on the mat. Probably ‘y ¥, | this her week. He is not “4. | Cy Young was the first player to} requiring a. little short throwing|this In another week. He is no’ wo theira | “Biscuits” asks them to pre |make use of the Hot Springs of] and quick stooping, Js a groph way|#0 stout as he was when Joho 1 nounce his nam Arkansas. He started going there|to reduce stomac 4 improve| Taylor sold him to Cleveland, and he has been making the men who | predicted he was all in take notice jby the y he has rounded Into form. Although he is a strong advocate of temperance, Cy indulges to the extent of one glass of liquor every fielding. Toward the latter part 20 y he sae gen To taking care of himself since A fan writ king us “ee | boyhood and the waters Young at-| third week Young pitches Bfé, nounce Zbyszko for him.. We | trituies bis long career, He goes| ball. He jobs the ball easily fore never try to pronounce it. We ic jiot Springs © week before the| day or so, until the muscles in Bis generally sneeze it. other players. In tho first week hejarm and wrist find themselves |takes the baths daily, This in the} Cy Young doesn't attempt a fast jextent of his work. ball until he is just right, and no|day before his workout. He be} | In the second week he starts! one but himself can tell when this/lieves his system demands it. He |road work. In sweaters Cy tramps| will be. He says he doesn't kuow/|has followed the practice for years. Serene ai ee nothing by showing your teeth. Try to give the club the best that's in you at all times, Tenth—Don't Balt the Umpire— oeceeeseeeoeoe oreo ee eee TEN DONT BY FRED CLARKE ljeeeeevoeeaeeee ee eevee eeeeeee ee WEST BADEN, Ind., March 20.—ybad example and interferes with dis- rrayanna ~— eee the advany Personal habits important | cipline lea bent you ; al vg li }factor in the ability of a baseball! Seventh—Don't Be a Backbiter— | aan bay red or him. Be- |player. He may have a natural ap-|If you have an idea that the clud ts ~ rad e sage obi isputing de |titude for the work, and he may be|net being conducted properly, tell |SiNons on the siahtost pretext dis: | jable to deliver the ‘goods, but {f he|the manager about it. If your sug-/fust Patrons The captain will at jdrinks, smokes cigarettes, keeps| gestions are good, he'll appreciate | ond to all the necessary kicking. late hours, or Ignores any of the|them. Players must pull together Cage other inhibitions of Fred Clarke j if thoy expect to win |decalogue for baseball players, he up Lowest prices Seattle has ever seen. Carload ship- ment just in—-Every One Guaranteed. TACOMA, March 19.—“The most Eighth—Don't Be a Quittor—If you | likely looking bunch of colts I have Hardware — |will shorten his diamond career, are getting a bad break in the luck,|seen in some time,” is the verdict R 1 If he lives right he will play better |brace yourself and fight al! the of Mike Lynch, manager of the jand last longer. The Buccaneer |harder. Remember that while one | Tigers today, after the first work Stilison Pipe Wrench chief has positive convictions on the |slip may be serious, two may be | out yesterday Gin. in. 10-in. ubject, and they are based on years | fat | Cy Ni _ A y Nolghbors, hard-bitting out- Regular prices that are 58c 58c 68c of close observation by one of the] Ninth—Don't Sulk—If you've been |fielder, and Cameron, first bag lower than “Specials.” iat greatest Hving students of the game |called down the chances are that! guardian, aro the stars of the new Dn land of the men who play it, Clarke lays down + 9s general proposition ‘that ff a ball player obeys the Ten! Commandments he will be more pro- | lyou deserved it, and you will gain bunch, 75c Our regular prices. ‘Tbe value 1 G5 Our, Teautar Phot, tom cannot be’ broken without raqaour y ot es genuine ) price, Union Jj interfering with his success, But |Fred has supplemented the law| |handed to Moses on St. Sinai with | ff jan equal number of commandments jfor players of the national game, Hero they are: | One—Don't Smoke Cigarets—If | ‘you must use tobdcco, select a good | Pittsburg stogie or a pipe Hardware, ball bearing, steel wheel, extension frame, Roller Skates, our “regular,” Are Different Bradbury Suite for men and young men are cut after smart models, hand. made by skillful tailor# and of far bet- ter materials than the ordinary clothing that you see worn everyWhere, Brad- | Two—Don't Drink — Alcoholic 40 watt, 110 volt, half |stimulants used in moderation may | bury Suits are sold exclusively at this foto — A5c do little harm; they can do no good, |] store and new~ arrivals show many land they are dangerous, Better be! a teetotaler and keep out of the way of temptation. Three—Don't Keep Late Hours— arly to bed and early to rise” Is |still a good maxim, It's the only| way for a ball player to keep his brain clear and his body fit, Fourth——Don’t Gamble~—Worrying Jabout an ace full that was beaten last, night, or wondering how the horses are running while play is In | progress are allke distracting, ‘The |player should give his entire atten- jtlon to the game. Fifth—Don't Be a Grouch—Cheer-. [fulness Is @ very desirable quality in anybody—a ball player in partic jular, Sharp answers and displays | of tomper on the field interfere with | successf team work, and some- times cause enmities that bring dis- sensions in the club. Sixth—Don't Procrastinate — If anything interfers with reporting on ame, cut It out. Tardiness sets a }] handsome shades in the new three-but- ton box-back coat—built with the non- breakable fronts. A complete line of sizes in the most desirable woolens and models are ready for you, In Footwear You should wee our splendid’ neW line of Spring Oxfords in tang, blacks and pat ent leathen shown in both“bluchers and buttons, EASTERN OUTFITTING CO., Inc. *‘Seattle’s Reliable Credit #ousa’’ 1332-34 Second Av. Near Union St. Piper & Taft Inc. 1117 Second Ave. 115-117 Seneca St. SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE STAR. When you buy a Bradbury you ear the m: Mberal terme that It ts pos aible to make. A Now Motel, Centrally Located Worth of High Class Furniture tn Rooms Inspect this hotel — Everyihing complete—A beautiful lobby and correspondence room one QRNER SEVENTH AND KING STREETS * Ind. 8071; Maim 4508 Fred as busy 4 wrestier found on this {ittie old continent i will be just about as can be for the next few weeks, if his present program is lived up to. Just as an example of what is expected of him while on his present trip, Fred already has arranged with Chet Mcin- john Berg, Frank Coleman Denver Ed Martin, within a week of his first appearance on the Coast. The mateh with Mo- Iintyre will be his firet; he will then meet Berg, probebly in Portiand, on @ date yet to be definitely settied; Frank Cole- man comes up in Seattle on the 27th, and Denver Ed will be seen in Everett a couple of days later, With the exception of jatter, the opponents select e¢ for the champion are about the best in the business at their weights, and the Big Smoke is a willing worker, who has learn. od @ lot in the short time he hae been interested in the mat game. Fred bout the small. eet man in the business at his weight. He stands but 5 feet 4 inches in height. He will have no difficulty at all in coming within the weight specified by Meintyre for the match, 168 pounds; as a matter of fact, he has agreed to make 160 for Cole- man on the 27th, #0 he will prob- ably be well under the poundage catied for in the artictes of agreement for the Vancouver Bout. Followers of the mat Game do not need to be told what @ great littie man Freddie Besii je. He has been seen in action on the Coast many times, and every time he shows he Gives the folke a run for their mon: He hae grappled the biggest men in the game, and the head holds he puts on a man give him a headache for a week afterward. Beell le always in shape, and those whe the rink the night of the Ten will eee a match worth while. Mra. Ad Woigast is a pretty, unsophisticated littie git! whom Ad used next school. She is a devoted tittle Puritan, who calle lies frightfully Ad's careless grammar. knows nothing whatever about fights and fives at a hétel or stays with Tom Jones’ wife during the champion's training periods. “The best Investment any fellow can make,” said little Ad, “is the right kind of a girt for wife; none of this sou- brette stuff for mine. When | Got married | went back home and got the little girl | went to school with.” Tom McCarey’s offer of $12,- 000 and no chance at the mov- ing picture proceeds doesn't look good to Tom Jones, man- ager of Ad Wolgast, and Tom burned up a little money wiring his views to the Los Angeles Promoter. Just $15,000, or 45 per cent of the receipts ie what Tom wants; also 51 per cent of the ploture money—no more; no less. A Vancouver paper remarks that the match between Beeli and Mcintyre, in Vancouver, will be a hummer, but that the one between 1) and Coleman in attic won't amount to much. Perhaps—but, just the same, Coleman threw Mcintyre in Stockton, Cal., some three or four y \f Kid McCoy should put over a haymaker to the jaw of young Carpenter and thereby annex the heavyweight championship of Europe, watch for the flock of has-been heavies to the Kid's Pure Thought and Deep Breathing institute. if McCoy can get away with the “pure thought” end of it, there is hope for the others, James A. H. the former Chicago magnate, is in favor of having congress investigate the supposed baseball trust. As long as he is about it, Jim might ask congress to investi- gate the Jim Hart-Cap. Anson controversy that used to be a favorite topic of conversation @ few decades ago. Mr. Hart might ask congress why Cap. Anson never realized anything on @ certain amount of stock he once held in a Chi- ago baseball club, Or, to put it in another way, why doesn't old Cap. Anson ask congress to investigate Jim Hart, now that “investigation” ee ~ aii more or less popu- jar And avhy can’t congress ap- point a committee to probe the recent Atte#Murphy fight? “Bombardier” Wells is com. ing to America, He's in no hurry, but he is coming. ones, Weed came op in practice an rapped ‘om out in approved style land the massive Mr. Dugdale had to step right lively on ome occasion get out of th one of F | drives. Nevertheless, Dug as [pleased at the way bis gardener |was smashing the ball, Weed woighs pounds than last year. St. Mary’s Coming Up OAKLAND, ( March 2 terest of baseball fans here in the game which will be tomorrow bet o 8. Mar lege and the University of Califor. nia teams. St. Mary's, which de |i fented Santa Clara last Sunday, ts! also arranging « series of games with the Victoria Northwestern | leaguers, which (eam is now train- ing at San Jose. Good for Starter LO8 ANGELES, March 20.—Out fielder Core, who fain would chum with Heinie Heitmulier and Jasper Daley {a the outfield for the Angels, is on duty with the club today. Core. who bit 300 with Grand Rapids last your, weighs more than 200 pounds, and resembles Heitmutler in archi- tectural design aad proportion. The first ball be bit in practice he drove over the fence. way 16 less Imported land ¢ uyper Geneve, per bottle Prima Viste Special, por Alveolar De Does Away Entirely With Partial not rational to say that In] vestigate, and thie e justifies the] to do. Hoe he ment becomes | aivestar bat modified according to the) “" “ae interpretation set upon the “end” meane” When it is a| If onty n of dentistry, we fay | say, roe, oF Coe ge universally that the “end § | replace sl! those the means.” and by thie we would | lost om both d that if you | perfect equlrementa, { bridgework wi mpene | even if we do commit theft order to pay for your teeth, but we 40 urwe that you seek unresistin to fulfill your desires in this direc- Yon, because your teeth are a que tion’ of importance and one whi i iy connected wit i. teeth that are ful, serviceable, [Seat tnt | done by t | bridgework is giene we have known many « : of patients who have so lected he care of their teeth an to| ing out ridgework become invalidic through the posedly high-class orders brought about by this omis-| Placing it with t sion. We have known cases of pa-| sftistio Alveolar tients who after a systematic tr bridgework in ment of pyorrhen, pus poisoning and|'s practically f disea 1. have | oF cutting inte t in | be drem Now. We | equal, which > have lof actual cases) thing ony | Show. Come jong and concentrated| | © plication. ‘Thin is | disease given up by » be Gentist | incurab! scome as| ties, We cure it ntlous a duty to| boastfal ur air is to give] can do anythii n for value ro-| dentistry, and . and we make no ro not able to live up to,| though there are many of our | Write for one if ous competitors who. would, have | ALVEOLAR you believe so. There is no better | Portland, way of finding out whether a thing| Seattle, or ts not so than to personally in- yBALLARL {Gime ear he strong 4 vitality will be « you and to he you bring about these d rewul A man learns how to do by carefal BY La Bg amv it A L, 0, HENDRICKS, Prop. Offtca Phone Bal, Salmon. Bay Wood @ Wood and Coal. At Stimson's MIL, Full Weight and Measure. Twenty-Seventh Semi-Annual Millinery Opening and SMART MILLINERY at the st. BALLARD BANDBOX—2005 MARKET. Na Saturday and Monday, March 16 a 1% The most reasonable prices for exclusive a Fine materials and At stock—You are earnestly iavited LAWN DRESSING LAWN SEED BALLARD HARDWARE CO., ING Phone Ballard 19 GARDEN TOOLS _——Tovs! Tove! Come PALACE OF SWEETS. Big Assortment, Best Prices. 6331 Ballard Aw Imported Norwegian and Swedish goods, ‘neta Ee Anchovies and Sardines,» Complete line of Hein#'s tled Goods, Gold Shiela, Crescent and Folger’s Coffees service, . Baliard 231