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-— nd pt id ab- « TENT Severe | EXTRA na rive ot| the y taking a Our Prices tor the & Month—& Gold Crowns per tooth Rridgework (strictly first-class) tooth Gold Fillings | . iJ hand extre heavy) or Our patent t the finest artificial teath tn the world, per $5.00 to Boston Dentists 1420-22 Second Ave. Opp. Bon Marche, Seattle. Office Phome, Main ee Phone Kenwood 1473 ROBERT CURTIS ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Wiring, Repairing, Installing 1018 Post St. Seattic No other ment — cur Chinese her roots d vere tables, We have many | different kinds treat as and all chronic akin die-/ * cancer Jue Wing Sang Chinese We cure FOR CASH PRIZES Dance at DREAMLAND TONIGHT Benes Tekee* * 2SC LADIES FREE TATE’S| Cabaret Restaurant The House That Quality Entertainment Built ~ Commencing Dec. 29th FRANK HOWARD Presents SLATER BROCKMAN id an GERHARDT SISTERS Entertainers de Luxe Direct from Chicago. 10——Other Acts——10 WHY WE ADVERTISE We belteve it to be false dignity to ait and walt for patronage to seek ue out, and therefor Goudie. Hen Rvery doctor to afvertise point. Is it money which may be f thelr true tims, so that ry to put them at a time ning them in I] expense is ne upon the right track when the case can fnauring satisfaction + the doctor can feel when he recetves his t he can render @ thoroughly ef service? low thetr cases to 0 look for pincing this clase of advertising before the - peop minds fs more worthy than any benevolent or charitable ¢ ‘The right word, or bit of kind ming de "We have on file many te eijable people of cures of curable Glsorders. DR. MACY, Speciali Osteopathy, Chiropractioe ment and Bloodless Surge pathic Medicin BE BLDG. and Firet Ay STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS 83.50 to $5.00) *\ Local radishes FULLERTON SAYS BOOZER DOESN'T _LASTIN BASEBALL By Hugh S. Fullerton | The first definite atep toward | the Introduction of crew rac Ing In Geattle’s high schools was taken Wednesday, when | Coach Hiram Conibear, of the | te university, addressing the | Broadway Boys’ club, announce | ed a plan whereby high school | | athletes would be encouraged to take up the sport. Children, let us have a temperance lecture tn figures. All high schools will be al You don't want it? Well, we'll have it, anyhow | lowed the use of the four-oared | It was not started aa a temperance lecture, at all, It was started shells daily for two half-hour | by an Investigation to find out bow long baseball players last in “fast turnouts, beginning at 3:30. It company, I took the baseball guide of 1904, made a Hat of players, 1s Conibear’s pian to create | such an Interest in the sport as | to cause a popular demand that shell racing be added to the In- and followed thom through the successive guides up to 1914 BLIND STUDENT ISSUES A OEFI Yestlers turning out for the Unt versity of Washington grappling squad have received an unusual challenge, in a defi from Joi Wood, a varalty student who ts to tally blind. Wood agrees to throw oph any man on the campus weighing under 140 pounds. His weight is 130. Wood will take on all mat artists who accept his challenge at 10 jo'clock Thursday mornings Then a peculiarity of figures tnterested me. From the major| }league roster of 1904 1 selected the names of 30 playera who drank! jintoxicants and 30 who did not drink, choosing only those who were known by me as drinkers or abstainers, I traced each one to see what has become of them. Here is a table } 1904 05 06 OF 08 09 10 11 12 18 14| The first turnout for places on Drinkers . 30 26 2 15 *) 4 4 2 2 2B egithe state university track team Non-drinkere . - 30 28 28 24 21 16 12 10 9 9 gitaken place this afternoon. The — candidates will report to Coach D. *One quit drinking. C. Hall and Captain Bill Williams Mind, these men are classed “drinkers,” not drunkards, Not | Prospects for a strong team w more than four called drinkers ever were drunkards. They were brightened considerably | Wednos “moderate” drinkers, Several of the non-drinkers had occastonally |¢4¥, when Paul Clyde, the crack The others were total abstain-,balf-miler, announced that he prob ably would able to reenter col lege and turn out ‘The squad will practically be de |taken a drink, but were not drinkers, ers, | The figures interested me so much | investigated as to their pres-| ent physical and financial welfare, This resulted tn another table: — | |veloped from green material, as but Unac counted {°¥ Veterans are expected to answer x Down and out. Medium. Prosperous. Dead. for, | he call rinkers rou 5 *3 9 5 vo. . M. TEAMS PLAY Non-drinkere 1 9 16 2 2) The Y. M. C. A. Junior basketball — tei Py ib waite of Uievatilt ts cxme. am will meet the Yesler Presby | Most of these statistics In the second table came from either talk-|tratfocr Barunday ulebe, the first jing with the players or from letters they wrote in reply to my quertes |team of the Seattle Y. M.C. A. will | Five of the drinkers responded quickly and asked for a loan ko to Tacoma Saturday night to | I could not ascertain certainly all the causes of death, Here is|meet the Y. M. of that city in a the result of the effort in that direction lretura inated, Non-drinkers—Appendicitia 1, pnoumonta 1 Drinkers—Kidney diseases 4, consumption 1, sutctde 1, accident 1 Willie Ritchie {* considering « The other two dropped out of sight before they died; one a bum tentative offer from Promoter Gra and the other reported in care of old friends ney to meet Wolgast in a 20-round Now, children, after studying the figures carefully, let ua go out | battle July 4 jand have another drink. In the language of many young players, “A | drink or two ain't goin’ to hurt no one,” Ig ttike Gibbons will mest Kid Graves in & six-round bout in Phila- |delphia February 16. STEVE KANE, THE DIMINU-)si!m finger who was obtained by/| tive umpire who held the indicator | Spokane from the Omaha Western! lin the Northwestern league sever-| League club last season and who} hat years ago, has horned tnto the | was jater turned back when hie! Federal league, according to word| work proved a miserable fallure, from Chieago. Kane, before com-|has hooked up with the Kavses ing to the Northwest, umpired tn) City Federals |the big leagues. He is one of the| smallest umpires in the business. | His work was entirely satisfactory in this cireuit, and he was well liked by the fans and ball pla) re | eee BECAUSE PRESIDENT FIELO-| ART WILSON, THE LOCAL! er Jones has ignored his name en-| heavyweight dub, will tangle with tirely at varions times fn discuss Frank Farmer, the big Tacoma ing the selection of arbiters for| boxer, at Morton, Wash., Saturday the coming season, Harry Ostiliek, | night. If Farmer has any ability at the former Spokane player man-|all, he ought to be able to «top she ager and last season an umpire in| scrap before the end of the four this circuit, has decided to try bis | rounds. hand at catching again. Harry has; £8 o> signed with Vancouver. Garry Herrmann hae figured * that Joe Tinker cost him $124,- 000 as manager for one year— and by the time he gets hi pencil sharpened to do some cee To the one guessing what Willie Ritchie's reason for not fighting on July 4 will be we will give a ringside seat. eee The attention of the Income tax collector is respectfully | called to the financial rating given out by baseball magnates more figuring, Joe will cost to prove their leagues Invulner him more than that. able. | eee | Meter LIFE 18 JUST ONE WINTER PITCHER 0. C. PETERS. THE after another. For instance play ——_ ers jump, the Cubs pr a pen-| nant, a new manager is hired a Cincinnat!, few Seattle players ha come through wh their contracts and the Pritish polo team stdrts training to ¢ k the cup Complete Report of Market Today Prices paid producers fur vegetavies Among the returning on: j and trait: a by 3. W. Geawin & Ca} observe Abe Attell, who, as we | Corre ed datty vr 3 = see It, hasn't been further away Yoxima potatoes 22.00 than the junction | Write river potatoes 1.00 ier eS | LET'S SEE! WHO IS PLAYING) Squash, Hubbard ce 4| with the major leagues now? Cadac : ~ or Poxing taught. Austin @ Salt'e gym. | 1.00 | 16 sii 100 : 1.99 head isttuce 00 Cal. radishes Yellow turnipe ... Sweet potatoes ssansnn} OHIO &; RATE| DENTISTS Seattie’s Chief Executive Oranges, We make a specialty of tooth Stamp of |srat |withont plates by r painless | le (Sito °°"! In m personal letter to Messrs. | | patie & Mitchell, lessees of the Seattle theatre, under date of Feb- |p | Pees Amalgam Filling . $1, ioe ruary 8, Mayor George F. Cotterill Tene, aver. tbe 17 strongly indorses Miss Rachael } Heme, fat, #1 'Gold Crowns... $3 "Porcelain Bridgework $3 |Marshall’s latest play, ‘The Crime lof the Law," produced for the first time on any stage last week at the ‘ | Se attle theatre, and which scored § t T th lack A great success that popular 960 U e § ee! Pacmana necessitated a second ye 0 n of the “Seattle-made” ite | Any work that doesn't prave| "eon *® Tun O° She 43 {| setiatactory will be repaired free! “the Orinie of the Law" is Mise mum 40 |% sere a9 Aig | Marshall's second successful play Selling | pelos for butter, enge and) Come in SOON—today, tf you! within one year—a record that any Son om 4 dally by The Bradner | wish—for free examination and) playwright might justly be proud Butter estimate. of. The theme of the play 1s the Native Weehington |}We STAND BACK OF OUR| story of a young man.who, because parva ot ya HH WORK FOR 12 YEARS’ |he made one error, is hounded into From. Bastorn creamery, GUARANTEE |a criminal life by the police and by ; 4 “ccensnery, % | 207 University St. 2nd @nd Uni-| cruel treatment of prison guards A say otis ; a | versity St. Opp. Fraser | Mayor Cotterill’s letter of indorse Zealand creamery, Paterson Co |ment to Messrs, Batley & Mitchell " » @ ws ” @ entlemen: 1 am glad to take | occasion to express my appreciation ° | of your new play, ‘The Crime of the ” @ ot Law; which was presented last oo 3 week, as | understand, for the firat | 20 Usberger Lae @ Geb {time on any stage, 1 Witnessed the | day,” THE STAR—THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1914. HIGH SCHOOL BOYS WILL USE SHELLS terscholastic games. “It Is my belief that half an hour Is long enough for high | school crews to be on the wa ter, but they must be out every sald Coniby "You fellows may have the use of the four-oared shells for two half-hour turnouts, begin- ning at 3:30," he continued, “but you must report dally | and muat take It up, not for the fun there is in it, or to pase the time away, but for the mor. al and mental benefit ae woll ae the physical.” Conibear will give a talk to the Franklin boys at 4:20 Fri- day morning. [Sport News Paragraphs ||; Following his bout with Murphy, Champ Ritchie will leave for Aus EXPECT HUNDRED RUNNERS IN RACE | MEET HERE FEB. 23 Frank Vance, of the Seattle outlined plans for @ big run to be held here on Monday, © include a twountle relay for high school teams and a mile relay for grammar school SEATTLE BUSINESS DIRECTORY Select from the Goods of the Fol- lowing Merchante—They Are Thoroughly Reliable and Bollcit Your Patronage, PPLLDALP ALLL LLL ADL PENNANTS _ | director| West Seattle high schools will en today ter teams. The other schools are also expected to compete The marathoners will start from the 8. A. ¢ building at about o'clock, While the big race 1# on, the two relay races will be run off. phyatenl Athletic elub, 1104 Third Av. ———— es RESTAURANTS February 23, tenmile marathon, a ° boys, A hundred entries are ex-| Routes of the three races will be| ( D | pected as follows erman Delicatessen The marathon will be open to all| Marathon, ten miles—Start from! Sho comers, Clubs will be allowed to| Fourth and Cherry, north on Fourth Pp jenter any number of runne: Tacoma The home will be ove down town. Trade school will too. Only | ave. to Pine st., up Pine to Kighth, C. F. Baasch the first flve men of each team will|down Eighth to Howell, east on 8 fixure in the scoring. The 8. A. C.| Howell to Hastlake, north on Kast 913 THIRD AVE. promises to put a strong squad in|lake to Lakeview boulevard, along the field. Vancouver Athletle club, eview boulevard to Broad |the Seattle National Guards and the carline, following Broadway line to CAFES astlake carline, Return to city over EK. Vv. ADAMS 4. D. THAGARD Pinieh on fourth Ave. astiake, finishing at the 8. A.C. | stretch of all three| High school relay, two miles, four-} Fourth ave., well| men teams, ‘ half mile each man running one-| j Start from East Galer| e eeca The finishing tape will tralia, where ho will engage In three |atretch across the street. infront |42d Westlake ave., over Westlake to fights for $50,000 lof the S. A. C. bullding, at Fourth| Pike st, south om Fourth, to fintsh 610 Viret Avenue a 36 jand Chegry. The club is furnishing |“t 8. A. C. buflding | 0 Dalen ee After signing his contract and the prizes. Tho idea of the race is|, Grammar school relay, eight-men onth, Roy |t0 create a greater interest in ath. “8!s8, each man running yards, ng it home for a month, letics in Seattle, The 8. A.C, in-| Start from Ninth and Westlake,| FUNERAL DIRECTORS _ Brown has turned the document 1n\() 4s tn mee It an annual affair |south on Westlake to Pike, south to Dug. He didn't want to be first.| There will be a costly trophy for 0M Fourth to 8. A. C. building. — SACREDNESS | ; eve |the winner of the marathon. In as , ‘There will be no four-oared races| addition to this, the first man gets We shall not mar the sacredness, at the next Poughkeepsie regatta, gold medal A allver medal is |humiliate you or belittle our pro according to announcement |provided for #econd place winner fession by bidding for the burial or Jim Coffroth fs on his way to arrange batt) between Merer-| land and Clab Rivers. eee Two billiard tourneys, one three-| cushion and the other balk line, started at the White House parlors Wednesday, Stoker beat Gilroy. “One Round” Hogan of San Fran cisco is en ite to New York, where he hassaccepted a 10 round | bout with Young Shugrue. VARSITY AND Y. M. WILL sid H. T. Anderson, new instrue-| tor of the class of v4 wrestlers at) the Seattle Y. M. C . has arrang- ed to send his inuae’ against the Pr | meda and a bronze High Schools to Enter. In the 4 other two races the win. y and Wolgast and /?!"« teams will be awarded a trophy r cup cremation of your loved ones. Let us know your wishes and they will be complied with, medal for third place We Give Free Trial to Prove Our Trace 1 a Broadway, Queen Anne and! a. 1 Rumene co. ior Third Ay. erapplers of the University of Wash.) ington in a tournament, which will be held in the Y. M. C. A. gym on the night of February 20. Arrange ments have been made for two bouts fn each of the divisions from the 115-pound class to the heavy- weight class and the winners of these pear In the finals RANDOM SHOTS |«The Crime of the Law” A Strong Object Lesson Says Mayor Cotterill MAYOR GEO. F. COTTERILL |.After Witnessing Presentation of Miss Rachael Marshall's Latest Play, Gives It His Unqualified Approval performance on Saturday night, at the close of the first week's run, and I congratulate the author, the mem- bers of your stock company and yourselves upon the successful pres-| entation “The play brings out most power- fully, perhaps, lesson along the line of social re form that | have ever seen on any stage. The tr ment of those who fall under the penalties of the law, while in custody and after they re. enter soctety and too much a matter of social re veng “We are in an era when recogni- tion of the law as an instrument for protecting society by providing the means for restoring manhood 1s be- ing substituted for the lingering bar. barity whieh has made prisons and punishments too often a blot upon civilization by thelr humanity-de- stroying actions and neglects. “The more people see ‘The Crime of the Law, sooner and stronger will public sentiment be aroused to demand and support intelligent so. cial service in prevention of such perversions “Yours very trul (Signed) "GUO, F. COPTERILL," ~ Advertisement, the strongest object | has been all too long} preliminary events will ap-| | & SONS MORTICIANS Ps) 1921 FIRST AVENUE * © New Pennants The Billie Burke | Poses 15¢- 4 EACH At The Star office and our down town Pennant Branch, The North- western Photo Supply Co. (Eastman: Kodak Co.) 1320 Second Avenue. BY MAIL And at Branches Z2Oc Each | In ordering by mail make first and sec- 1 ond choice, as the supply will not last long. HERE THEY ARE: The Bathing Girl — The Co-Ed 4 The Stage Beauty | Matinee Girl | Flowers Office Girl Debutante September Morn Next week “SWEET SIXTEEN” and “A SUMMER DREAM” will complete the series of ten as offered by The Star. ad