The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1914, Page 7

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He Gets Many Love Notes; Is Bachelor » , 4 . . afl a . a ~ Fans fatled to perceive We' x i Dell's “hundred per cent” improve: | > 2 ment when the blg Idaho boy : worked against Portland yesterday " In fact, Welser showed the same ~ “Bh old stuff that had him wearing a > “Bi path from the mound to the barn ad ing the closing of the campaign 913, The game was left high | when the young hero, Mr Reardon, took up Welser's dry burden. ee Mayor Hi opened ings in poor form. the proceed: | The mayor's 709 Third Avenue New York Block KANG Makes Your Clothes ff 2 Your Clothes Will ff It ae he remains tn baseball. THE STAR—THURSDAY, & bachelor’s life for Willie Mitchell, star Cleveland Nap pitcher, as long Willie made this confession to his teammates the other day, when Joshed about the large number of scented minsives he receives | LAST YEAR'S MODEL er} good right arm hung Imply at his| side, Too much glad-hand did tt His honor utilized his left wing When he heaved, the ball rolled tn the direction of first, Dug, all set to catch It, tried to persuade Hi to chuck another, But the mayor wouldn't eee The batting optic of Charley Swain, who came to Seattle | with the home-run batting t for the st tucked away in his bat bag, ts still a little hazy, The fans have been jumping all over Charlie in the one fan Whereje git that record Winter league?” inquired of Charles yesterday, after Swain | gai.) had fanned for the second time. Dug must a been soft to sign a guy like you,” another volunteered Swain put a ailencer on the knockers when he biffed a single in the sixth, . The wages of Bobby Coltrin and Manager Nick Willlams wer nicked to the extent of ten seeds apiece after a runin in with his umps. A thrown ball hit Portland coach off first and Shuster chased Bob by, who dashed home on the play, back to third. Manager Nick and Bobby o ceeded out on the field and threat ened to have the very blood of his nibs if he continued to pull such stuff, Williams tnsisted there wasn't any such rule in the baseball cat jogue. At this juncture the fines were slapped on. After’ calming Li down, Manager Nick journeyed to the pit and bawled out his player for not r moving himself when he saw th ball coming. de ea oe | Seattle is the only club in the cir os Joult which provides a batting cage Restaurant THIS WEEK ‘The Girls in the Arbor’’ Elizabeth O’Brien Rose O’Brien Miss Browning Miss Grace Purdy Winona Houitt Peggy Nash Brink & Wilson Coming April 20 SEATTLE BUSINESS DIRECTORY "Select from the Goods of the Fol- lowing Merchants—They Are Thoroughly Reliable and Solicit Your Patronage. ween ARE FOR SPRIN Liven up your Store Front. Let us quote You prices for a new “business getting Awning. “made in Seattle Estimates Free LINQUIST & LUND 1104 THIRD AVE. ELLIOTT 5340 RESTAURANTS German Delicatessen | Shop C. F. Baasch 913 THIRD AVE. CAFES J.D, THAGARD i" | EB. Vv. ADAMS The Mecca 610 First Avenue | 219 Union % | Parenssnmne BS) “FUNERAL DIRECTORS SACREDNESS We shall not mar the sacredness, | humiliate you or belittle our pro- | fession by bidding for the burial or cremation of your loved ones. Let us know your wishes and they will be complied with, BUTTERWORTH & SONS MORTICIANS 1921 FIRST AVENUE |plate and eliminates the nece }of a catcher. every o'clock. j for morning practice. Manager Raymond figures about an hour of this form of practice each day and pretty soon our Giants will be clout Ing the other pitchers to death. The cage is put diréctly back of home ity The players practice The center field fence has been painted green, as a result of com plaints made by the players that flaring adver jwith their batting. batter stands up at the plate, he faces a solid green foreground. Dug says b made in the Rainier Valley faing signa interfere Now, when « expects more hits will be Guigni, ib . batted ba! 1060001 r00001081—4 sand 2 rune hits and i ran HN 1 NORTH WEATE: tad! 2 1,0 1 i ‘ NATIONAL LEAGUE Standing Won. Lost. F Cincinnati . on f Ri 1 6 1000 i 0 1,0 ae 5 Pittebure 1 i Rroate 4 C Chica e 9 6 New York ° o AMERICAN LEAGUE Standing Won. 1 Pet Chicago 1,006 New York 100 Detr Washington Re Ph | ae Cle mn 5 adelphia Louis 4 ° 6 i i 1 Rpaeperererery HIM, YOu SHOULT GET RIO oF HIM. | morning, beginning at 10 cision are the players themselves e army of athletes refuse to believe that Manager Williams’ nag is a/ fore instead of after meeting Willie. ‘| frisky thing. ee eo} ti tickle Sam Langford now weighs 210 Kiliflay, the venerable, leaned up pounds. If he continues to gain against the green paint and there-| weight he will be heavyweight ¢|4pon wore a fresh look ampion, as far as heft is con of a submarin j : 2\for an Old Rose Rud, once a Ken | | 50° show that he can | 600 ADOLPH CARES ENOUGH FOR HIS PET TO SELL IT ADOLPH, I FIND YOU HAF IN “PRITZIE' REALLY A FIRST CLASS DOG. BUT VOT ALIFE HE LEADS! EF You HAF ANY RESPECT FoR Jevery team In the three big leagues! APRIL 16, 1914 Hy Jasper, the Chicago White Sox pitcher, carries a bar of soap around In Tr pocket and lathers his famous spitballs Instead of using the time-honored slippery ‘BIG SMASHUP IN ORGANIZED BASEBALL! HUGH FULLERTON SAYS COURTS’ PLAYERS, NO LONGER HELD BY RESERVE, MAY SIGN UP WITH CLUB THAT BIDS HIGHEST DECISION IN FEDERAL LEAGUE CASE MEANS ANARCHY IN THE GAME od, Jasper says soap ts mauch {fective elm, ft has been discove By Hugh S. Fullerton | erty to Jump where they please signing them Salas Gavitee’ dettalon cn. tee The Federal league has had appli-| ‘The decision destroys all the validity of the reserve clause in cations from at least 100 major | dope BASEBALL 18 eT BACK » paanball soltvnaie adams tao Wie, league players who want to join|TO THE DAYS OF THE BROTH By Hal Sheridan ine Ut plavat, aildleinw Chol t0 stan them. They were advised by their|ERHOOD, when, if a manager at BW YORK, April 16—The most where they please, oe the lawyers not to touch players under | tempted to ove a player forloptimistic man iu the world, Eng player a free agent do bust contract until after the Killifer de-|some misplay, the employe simply |ijsh sporteman say, 1» Bombardier os wit Geedee ae cision and to submit the contracts | climbed a fence and joined the oth-| Wella, the Brit te wilt wreak ‘Ge ss of all players to the lawyers before ler organization ies bea sight trust | —_ | It Bomb it will boost players’ salaries sky! A } IT FIN ever gets the high! ’ knockout aby it will make the baseball war one | well developed of extermination! ~~ they say he will it will upset the entire fabric of ~~, Bar! Hamilton | = be a terror organized baseball! \; Every time he dy gets knocked out It will change the dope on nearly It will throw the jumping season wide open! IT SPELLS ANARCHY IN BASE Contracts Worthle Judge Sessions has held that the contracts by which the baseball trust has been held together for the ast twelve they years lack mutuality are worthless, be cau inequ and are 8 manding Killifer to the} Philadelphia team he decides that the Federal agents had no right to persuade the catcher to jump bis re-| serve contract In simple words, it to mean that if a player is dissat isfied, he cannot be held, but that the third party has no right, for selfish motives, to in terfere and persuade an em- ploye to leave an employer. | Makes Players Independent Therefore, if the player is not satisfied, and is held only by an in equitable contract, he is at Ifberty to # employment elsewhere. Killifer, having been satisfied and | not seeking free hi chang: | ed the aspect of the suit | Organized baseball has known for many years that its ¢ would not hold in court. 8 the for mation ¢ Federal they ha amend t r contract * it within the law. = | Baseball Plavers’ frater- | out word advising their} rs not to sign any new until the courts have ntrac 1} a as to bri But the nity t mem t the legality of the ve claw and the ten-day notic clause. Feds Have 100 Applications Bill Kalhfer The only beneficiaries by the de Those who are working under bold over contracts, those who have sign ed the old form of contracts and re fused to sign the new, seem at Iib-| Louls Browns, to play with Kansas pitcher for George Stov now aure enough. Having tied one knot tn the Colt's|who meets Ritchie soon, Is on a tall, Ma er Raymond and his vaudeville tour. He is wise to do this stunt be- That can be gotten with the aid ¢ ned Willie Hoppe has a now mmana- ger named Normal Carlyle, . Welsh and Cross are to see Wil Ne Ritchie fight Murphy But far be it from them to be Jealous of Murph. man offered $35,000 . A Kentucky If Oxford University cleans up the Intercollegiate fourmilo relay at Philadelphia April 25, John Buil will have no cause to crow tucky derby favorite, but was o< | refused Bee The Oxford team is made up of . one Englisher, one American, one ;|_ One of the Colts did a snow plow! Austratian and one South African. act in sliding into second, where A guy named Waterbury withdrew from a tennis tournament. His mainspring must have run lown. . upon little Napoleon grew black in the face (and then some) + If the damp descends this after- noon as it did during yest mixup, we advise all blea to bring their bathing suits a a A DIP INTO THE PAST } July 31, 1986, H. M. Johnson went} 100 yards in 9% seconds, Cleveland, | After giving Shuster the Umps once over, the ball players promise | Obio. eaure es to let him gxist for a few days longer, anyhov A GLIMPSE AHEAD “ee Battling Kieble vs, Tommy Teauge, April 18, New York; mid-| dleweighters, | iat | A DEEP THOUGHT FOR TODAY! The minors are loading up with| big league table scraps Nick Willams promises that some of his athletes who are on trial may be acquitted during the next few weeks ‘ . HELP! FIRE! POLICE! We hope to be sitting in the ball yard when Joe Wally tries to con vince the umpire about an {infield fly with nobody on the bases. NICE FOR BUFFALO. | Federal schedule conflicts with (international league 45 times at Buffalo. EDGAR 18 LUCKY Guy. | Princeton trustees accept offer of Edgar Palmer to build a $200,000 | lightweight ' stadium. Around won at Jamestown ' which only goes to n buzz around. Buzz the other day, ing of the federal judge, and Ear! Hamilton, Bill (Red) Killifer, catcher for the Phillies, and Earl Hamilton, star | Girot, Smith and K Kansas City Feds, ar Red is allowed to play with Philadelphia by the rul- | in the lime’ who degerted the City, for more monty. | More for Butler comes | fighter awa | SAN FRANCISCO, April 16 roped pt Me Willie Ritehie and Harlan Tommy erities someth Murphy eased up today on the i to write about grind preparatory to thgir sched-|> aa yaa |uled 20-round bout here tomorrow) SHERIDAN | eet by and | evening want to lone it,” sald Al MeCoy, con Both fighters were down to the | queror of George Chip, today Up |to the time I sent George Into slum berland I had just been a-middlin’ jfair middiewight. The trouble with required 125 pounds today The odds on the contest to other tumble today, Ritchie k an ruling la 1040-4 favorite. Even at this| 70 bad been that I never trained.! | price, Murphy money is scarce. | m Ritchie put in a hard day's work | SCARE VARSITY | yesterday, He was out on the road | early in the morning, and during sabia the afternoon boxed’ six rounds The Ballard high school nine gave three with Willie Robinson and | the Universit f Washington team th with Johnny O'1 y a hard rub i an exciting game “Il want my friends to know that| played Wed aday afternoon. ‘he I feel right for this match and| varsity won, 7 to 5. For the first| | that I feel confident I am going to} five inning Bike of Nard held | win,” nald Ritchie today. And I|the college boys without a run. In| | will win just as fast as I can |the meantime Ballard piled up | . . four. Leader, Bryant and Morrill | | | pitched for Washington. Leader INDIANS LEAD | Spokane took the 1 in th Northwestern league race yesterday by trimming Victoria again fanned $ in 3 innings. MORAN NEAR DEATH. Owen Moran, the English light weight, is reported dying of tuber: losis in London This Pitcher Puts MY WORD! BOMB’S A BALLY FALSE ALARM Soap on Spitters I trained hard for Chip, and when 1 planted trusty right to the Jaw, he dropped like a log. verybody seemed surprised. 1 was not only surprised, but para lyzed. My first thought was: ‘My, he's on the floor and can’t get up. Gee whiz! 1 must be a champion!’ It was a funny feeling, too,” oe American league scorers are up against ow that Walter John son ha loped into a pinch hit ter It's like this: When Walter goes in for another pitcher in the ninth ng and comes through with the e that wine the game, how are ) put the happen- ng down? Will Johnson or the other pitcher e credit for the victory? “#6 Now that Chicago won't stand for them, Milwaukee |. the pres ent paradise of the wrestiers, “Strangler” Lewis and Waldek Zbyszko are holding forth there, Wrestling matches are being staged every other wi and are drawing fair crowd VARSITY ENTERS BIG RACE: WON'T SEND FRESHMEN The University of Washington fs today entered in the Poughkeepsie regatta. Manager Ralph A, Horr filed Washington's entry by tele graph Wednesday night. This formality places the possibility of the trip beyond a doubt. AT SPOKANE RH Victoria ma 2 4 2] ‘Topeka, in the Western league,| Invitation to compete, tn the Spokane Peake ve 8 11 O/has 15 pitchers trying out for a job| STeat event was received from the | Batteries — Baker and Shea;| on its hurling staff officials yesterday. Washington | Steele and Cuningham. was invited to send its freshmen | _ | Nap Rucker, Brooklyn southpaw,| crew as well. This invitation was, AT TACOMA R. H. £./ Stricken with tonsilitis after recent| however, declined. Vancouver ond 2 6 ame, is seriously fll. The race takes place in June. | Tacoma ...... soccesee 2 8 sa | Batteries —Hunt and Cheek ght St. ponents at the White lous per| AT NEW YORK—New York-| shore ‘nuff con- 3 j@ playa two more today. - | than est modern” outside Foomm Tes toAT CHICAGO. ter consolers than good) to Ge." Btewart house, 86 West |Chicega ae oa eae | tobacco an’ a good dog: T says) Stewart Adve rtisement pe SRT cae Pret? 1, *twouldn’t help none BASEBALL J teur™”. 27 ef you was jes’ gettin’ ready to be TOMORROW DUGDALE PARK PORTLAND VS. SEATTLE Take Fourth Avenue Cars. We help the by he co. 1107 Third Avenue. Braces, Trusses, Artificiat ame and Deform hi * Limbs AT ST, Louis: RH. EL Louis itn 6 6 Pittsburg 6-4 AT BROOKLYN—Boston-Brook- HEN you feel the’ need of some real consoled, an’ one of ‘em hauled lyn game postponed; rain. | AT PHILADELPHIA—New York | Philadelphia game postponed; rain. | AT CINCINNATI~Chicago-Cin- cinnati game postponed; rain. FEDERAL LEAGUE AT PITTSBURG—Brooklyn-Pitts- burg game postponed; rain. | | AT BALTIMORE—Buffalo-Baiti- more game postponed; rain. HOLD A SMOKER DR. MACY Ten Years’ Cons Coamopolia, Wash. March 26,1914 San Francisco 3, Los Angeles 1; Venice 14, Sacramento 9; Oakland-| Portland game postponed; rain. | MORGAN CREW CAPTAIN. || | Jullus Spencer Morgan, grandson || of the late J. P. Morgan, has been chosen captain of the Harvard senior crew. | LIFT FIGHT LID. The boxing lid has been lifted in Boston. hree months’ treatment from Dr had another attack, and though I am do as much work in a day days cur THIS ad e | l | pete spondency, Impaired Vi Pi | — \} Asthma has been the cause of myc) Nervous Debility mever falls. ES The Muny Civil Service club has|/ older it seemed to get a tight- 10a m. to § p.m. Sundays, q arranged a big boxing and wrest-| me,.in Spite Of any tees, etter mee ling smoker to be held at the Pa scatuedt $0 an, aeik . : ; cific Athletic club tonight. Mayor|| RT Steer, for treetmens tn ee tad ~DR. MACY, Specialist 4 Gill will be the guest of honor. |} that [ could not walk @ slow walk gn Advanced Methods, 302-3-4 || for 100 with stopping to get my kM dist, Seattle, Wash. reath resting. My limbs were COAST LEAGUE SCORES breath hedly. and my circulation eo poor that my body was of ® bluish hee. Macy completely re and do It as easy, as at any time in my yor ADVERTISEMENT OUT FOR FUTURE REFERENCE KLEIN'S SHOE HOSPITAL DR. MACY CURES Chronic many so-called In- The Eye. and . Dropsical, mic Conditions, Rhew- matism, Nervous Disorders, Paralysis, Stomach and estinal | Disor Kidney, Liver, Bladder and all Urie- ary Disorders, Disorders of the Skin and Blood. Eczema, Acne, Pimples, Rupture, Piles and ail rectal troubles, without the knife All Diseases of Women—trregularities, Painful Periods, displacements and all disease and weaknesses peculiar to the sex without resorting to sur- gery All Diseases of Men—Nervous Debitity, Blood Potson, all special and Chronie Disorders and weaknesses. My treatment for all weaknesses, De- tality and! eved me. I have not I believe I can now 80 years of ag: A. D. McPHERSON, Bridge Foreman, N. P. R. R. 613 Second Avenue NEXT TO BUTLER HOTEL 7 NOW HERE 159 MY BROPOSITIONS YOu TRADE Me “FRITZIE" UND HE GETS. & DECENT HOME UND You GET DESE PRETTY MARGLES. PRETTY MARBLES, Four NICE Vous! Boo-tico! CocreyeFRiTzie!” WORDS BY SCHAEFER—MUSIC BY MACDONALD DER FRST RULE I MAKE For You, DOGGIE. 199 DOT NOBODY SHALL KISS VOU MITOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION, (T 166 UNSANITARY UND DANGEROUS.

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