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|HERE'S LITTLE By Hugh S. Fullerton The other night, at Memphis, Frantle Callahan, a mere boy, knocked out Joe Rivers, the Mexican, in the second round. You may not be interested in boxing be Interested In thi A few years ago a poor, timid youth, hat in hand, slunk into the office of Tom McCarey, the Los Angeles promoter, and ask ed for a chance to box some one of the lightweights in the preliminary events for a few | dolilars. He needed the mon | White at the 11th hour, when ey | taken seriously iil, MoCarey needed a boy to fill in.} declared to have Ne gave the boy a chance. Strip-| had the best of eight of the ped, Rivers revealed a wonderful ten rounds and was accorded physique. His skin was clear olive) the popular verdict | and gleaming, his muscles were Beecher put up a most aggressive long and pliable, bis ullders had| battle, but he was against a more the strength and the grace of al skillful ring general and the ma thoroughbred, his eye was clear, ority of his blows falled to land his speed and footwork show on the ch fon, In th nd promise auld hit ! t jon the Yorke a Mexican cht stud hard rig to Welsh's jaw which saw a coming cham dazed the « for a moment In Dis first batth vers showed) ‘WW . os — but the latter came back in the such promise that the Coast hailed) CALLAHAN A MERE BOY KNOCKED OUT RIVERS IN TWO R third and boxed Beecher all over him as the nex 33-pound cham-| rin In the fourth Beecher Bien’ He toechs wi ro the ease and| im quit, He wants to quit when) hard as he ove could and be has possi pana iy tae fientinn the ferocity of a tiger, and rushed] he ts hit hard.” more experience and more skill! weish into his corner. In all of toward the top of his class, In two} Then Rivers took a beating. He NO™ oa any lHghtwelght can! ine other rounds the advantage wan years the championship was within} took it from a man he was expect-| ti» is licked before the mateh| With Welsh, who landed stinging his grasp. He was wearing fine) 0, aaron: tarts. Like thousands of others} bows to the head and body fre Stitt ee pg nnd Mew high, bat] Then, one after another of the in other lines, he lost heart and|@uently, at the same time making “anlage Bcsaermagaergete: |lightweights beat him; mon he had courage—faith in himeelf—and a| Beecher miss, by bis clever foot One night he won a decision 1n| ease Nenty “ tome an ‘tioalty hor wk atm rerpopsticaald bar a short fight. His opponent came} 0 04," nniN Sincene’s tae onl 8 er went into the ring welgb from the ring battered and beaten, uueeked” tes oht in tee reel shh and sont x ounds, an advantage of a but laughing. In the dressing room) ""Di os is a better boxer. A be the fires! tit an three pounds over I inquired why he laughed ra iby cn i lie ole « sion. Rivers’! quit,” he said, scorn-|‘4" hse adibcondele We next battle will be with fully. “He had me licked, but if 1| r Willle Ritchie, from whom he won had anything at all I'd have made the tit It will be staged here on} FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANCING EVERY EVENING EVERY ONE WELCOME 50c TO $5 SAVED Call at My OPTICAL DEPARTMENT and I will guarantee to BRO Wig -— any pair of ginsse may require. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN Optical Department Ave. Washing- Mate 3640 705 First ton Bids BULL BROS. Just Printers 1013 THIRD <AIN 1043 OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replaced by The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your original | teeth. Examinations are now be {ng conducted without charge, and estimates are furnished In all cases. 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The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth- \ FREDDIE WELSH OUTPOINTS WILLIE BEECHER STEVENS AND HULEN WIN BILLIARD MATCHES TAR WEDNESDAY, TRAGEDY OF THE PRIZE RING Welsh Is | Master of Beecher NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—Going Imo a contest with the holder of the world’s lightweight crown upon 24 hours notice, Willie Beecher, the New York lightweight, made great showing last night against Freddie Welsh in the ten-round, no-decision bout, In which Beecher substituted for Charley a date yet to be selected, early next AUTHORITIES MAKE GREAT DISCOVERY MISSOULA, Mont, Jan, 27.—In the 4 round of the contest be- Mike Gibbons, the phantom-like boxer of St. Paul, is the twe Ray Campbell of & pore nal best midcleweight in the business. Despite howls to the con Frank Barrioau of Vancouver | trary from Eddie McGoorty, Jack Dillon, Jimmie Clabby, et al., last night authorities suddenly the lad from Minnesota is the nearest thing to a real champion discovered that the contest was a the fane have im since the death of Stanley Ketchel. He doesn’t stand head and shoulders above his contemporaries, but he stands high enough that he can be recognized easily over their heads. prize fight” and stopped it before either boxer had a marked advan | tage. Campbell was sent to the; | floor in the third round but jumped} up instantly and was prepared to/| Before the Gibbons-Clabby battle at Milwaukee, the Hammond boxer) continue the battle, when the au-/ was considered about the eream of his division. He bad a belt embla-| th Lat t | matic of the middleweight championship given him by Uncle Tom| (ores Jumped ppp tag dige Boe! McCarey tn San Francisco after he had beaten George Chip tn 20 rounds. | oe 6 8 the fight was a good draw. | But Clabby failed to show championship class In his b ttle with | Gibbons. Mike was an easy win according to ringside it was a real battle all the way f bby's friends argue tha lose his prestige in ten rounds Gibbons so clearly outfought } ten that it's a e bet he cow Two men remain to be di d also do it f 1d of before Mike's claim to the crown wil Pac North weat focal branch of the tle Union of Amer be directed | the charge grid is to be absolutely unquestioned. They are E ye kosh bear, and Jack Dillon. Dillon hasn't be | with the middieweights recently and the cry has gone up that | Hoosier can't mke the weight. But Dillon contends he can and offers to prove !t if the occasion demands. In a recent bout with Porky Flynn, over in Brooklyn, Jack weighed 169 pounds and was so strong that he all but knocked the Boston battler through the ropes for a jong sleep. It Jack can make the figure he certainly should be given a chance at Gibbons. McGoorty can probably make the weight with ease. And | the Oshkosh entry has certainty proven that he Is a contender. Knowing tittle of law, I'll cadeitaké to settle the argument between the Feds and O. B. B. on this basis: Any discontented die MeGoorty in doing much bus Osh inows | P the the | 8#ociation, the A ur Ath fen, The probe will principally at boxers having been made that at two clubs have pald amateurs appear at smokers MAY REVIVE RAGING to player, held only by reserve clauses, has the right, between SACRAMENTO, Ja A bin seasons, to find a place and salary which will satisfy him. Any , t a revival of horse racing player who breaks a straight contract with either side is not in California under the control of worth having or fit to have in baseball. Any player who breaks 4 state commission, and with the ar clause during the playing ion betrays a trust and violates a confidence, On that basis the fans will judge, no matter what the courts declare. | schoo midget basketball season CANADIAN COMES | Will be played tomorrow afternoon TO U. Ss. FOR BOUTS |: the Broadway gym, when the parl-mutuel system of betting, was introduced in the state legislature! | yesterday | Franklin midgets will tangle with | the Broadway lightweights. The Broadway jada are slight favorites owlin In one of the two games sched. ied in the City Basketball leag Doubles in the City league were last night, the S. A. C. team, No. 1,| bowled on three alleys last night | beat the Knights of Columbus team|0® the Bismarck alle | by a score of 41 to 15. The Knights| Vere 48 follows: Smith and R showed lack of team work, The| 108: Cressman and Ross, 1,926 Coast Artillery five failed to show) OV” mi mu for their scheduled game with 8. A | C. team No. 2 and the latter took! On the 8, A. C. alleys the double: | | |!t by default, resulted: Allen and Koch, 1,771 | Wa and Harris, 1,986; Thom-! | The ¥. M. C. A. students who |have been sweeping things before! them for some time past, got theirs ast night at the hands of the Queen en and Clington, 1,784, and Moffatt and Maclinn, 1,847. Christians. The score was| Dobbs rolled 1,697 10 In favor of the hill boys,{424 Marshall and Peacock, who kept the students down to one| EY ca ell bowled 1,7 basket in the second half n and Shuman, 1,656 Jimrncy Walsh. "s team, No. 8, In the Jimmy Walsh Sanction has just been issued by | El league, beat Capt Nine straight knockouts having | the Federation of American Motor. |Gardineer’s team, No. 4, Inst night | lexhausted all available opponents |cyclists for a 100-mile motorcycle by a score of 9 to 2,350. Latham | in Canada, Jimmy Walsh, who|meet to be held at Galesburg, Ill.,|of the winning team rolled high claims the lightweight champion-|on July 5, average of 172 and Daly of the los- ship of the Dominion, has come —~|ing team high score of 225, lover the line to tackle the 13 pounders of this country. In none! of these fights has his opponent | stayed more than four rounds. The The Lesleckis handed a wallop ing to the Mulligans in the Knights jof Columbus House league tourney, American boys he has fought since |the score being 2,2 Des his arrival have slowed up his ONLY | and MacDonald, both of the knockout record cons bly, inning team, bowled high score his record of wins star him as|}) uw, os of 197 and high average of 175, re a clever lad wh st Bad get Pc a pectively ‘a : safe and eure cure, not an ex pee ., reliable remed Bowling on the Imperial alleys ‘or all Female Troubles and esterday afternoon in a Printers Irregularitie ® friend in || jeague match, the Long Primers d n beat the 1,438 to 1,408 Ross of the Nonparetis rolled high Nonpareils, JAN [—IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS EDITED BY HAYBEE SMITH schmidt 140. t i | masters Loveland he tx not apt to| yy STEVENS AND 2 7, 1915. PAGE ees | J HIS busy, progressive dawn of a new era of commercial and social development. The means by which tions and indications of personality, can be carried across the continent instantly, have been provided. Talking by telephone from the Pacific to the Atlantic is now an accomplished fact. The celebration of this latest and greatest tri- umph in the art of telephony has just taken place. Within a short time the public will have, ready for its use, the product of American brains, American initiative and American scientific and technical skill, a transcontinental telephone service, the equal nations of the world. It is a splendid scientific achievement of the highest character. The power that sends the human voice out over the telephone is scarcely greater than that of a breath, yet the means have been provided by million people will have fr their daily use a system of communication that knows no East, no West, no North, no South. Dialects, provincialisms, sectional prejudices, and held it to the end frequently missed on easy shots,! but gave flashes of playing that] stamped him a comer. Both men [missed billlards that they usually |could make left-handed In the evening Hulen, by spells of CHAS, HULEN alternately steady and shaky play- WIN WITH CUES jing, maintaining throughout an average of close to five, took tch from Klineschamidt ule "usually does not have the Results ‘Yesterday tough time reeling off runs that he Afternoon—Stevens 200; Love-|tasted last night. He, too, dis-| and 128. played a clever use of the draw and Evening — Hulen 200; Kline-| masse, making billiards with the| latter stroke at difficult angles and from awkward positions. Hogue leads in the series with two won, none lost; both Hulen and Stevens have won and lost once, |while Kiineschmidt and Loveland Games Tod 2:30 p. m—Stevens 8:00 p. m—Hogue Interesting developments took place yesterday In the seri have not, as yet, carried away any 18.2 balkline billlard match laurels, Brown & Hulen’s parlors REE TAREE the championship of Seattle, 7 but evan more decisive games |Q’LEARY IS OUT OF IT are acheduled for today. D, L. Stevens flattened James Love- Johnny O'Leary, the Seattle land, 200 to 128, in the after. |. noon bout yesterday, white in | lightweight, who was to have met the evening Peter Klineschmidt Joe Bayley, former Canadian light was conquered by Charley | weight champion, tomorrow night, Hulen’s cue, 200 to 140. and who had several othef bouts in The games today will have a de ' ermining bearing on the city balk-| the Northwest lined up, has been ine championship, for if Hogue! forced to cancel his entire schedule a sprained ankle, recefved in bd 4 ble in. hi me later with "Bronchitis, Catarrh i S d score of 189 and high average of|#tumble in his game la i caRataRtite: , : ite forms, such as Tonaliteis, anderson s 175 |Kiineschmidt. In the afternoon] training. O'Leary says he will give Adenoids, Gastric Uleer of the |Charley Hulen is billed to meot|tho Injured joint ample time to a a wels, C By shutting out the Emanuel! Fighting Ia a strange game; now|Stovens, the evening having been| heal and will take a complete r Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh ¥ 9 of the Bladder, Prostatitis in || Lutheran ive, 28 to 0, in a Seattle! Charlie White wants Freddie Welsh | wet aside for the match between| during the process, so will not b { men, all Bowel Diseases in Church league contest at the Lescht are all this and more, as thou to sign an agreement to keep the | }fogue and Loveland, Inasinuch as} seen in the ring for a considera women; Rheumatism of all |Mpark gym last night, the Plymouth||) sandy have testified, ‘Try San. | @#teement he signed to do 135|hoth Hulen and Stevens won yes-|time. Freddie Bogan, O'Leary forms; all Nervous Diseases, church quintet anchored to the||) derso: > 4 you w {| pounds at B o'clock terday, with an average of npproxi-| manager, has substituted Travie 3 7 lerson's® Pills and you will no’ Eantiaitenbess Epilepsy, Heart and Eczema, If! league championship. The Uni-|| be disappointed. Take no || eR mately five, they are likely to stage} Davis to go against Bayley tomor and many egy too numer. versity Baptist bunch beat the Tab other. Nothing else is . a thriller today. The Hogue-Love-| row ous to mention. If you re in . st bo: & closell| good. . ¢ I via land set-to is apt to be productive doubt, write and I will give MS Uhdk ae uae oon cee AB hag ct of a real game of billiards © yar allhogy llaapmr °f W casy for the Ballard Christians, go-||) box guaranteed, For sale. by PR te kas i RO SEALS GET BODIE — ‘ ing down to the tune of 56 to 14 Kineell Bros., and a sD eeneat witee bey win cube Olympic View Sanitarium, |f| while the Colman Hible class five|| Madison, Third and Columbia, || upranteg, ine supertortey, ot of 26, 46,26 ond BL helping ne CHICAGO, Jan. 27—“Ping” Ro. 14-16 W. Harrison ioe Abang od sg Me Mec! sg nrg] Address all letters to the Lundbe uss, and give free/along, he soon outdistanced his|‘i¢, since 1911 outfielder for the “R. G. J. NUERNBERG | Woodiand Park Presbyterian out-| teint to prove 1 outhful rival. Employing a draw| Chicago White Sox, has been sold ee iceschnesy-o1et fit, 42 to 6 i RAYMOND REMEDY 00), LUNDBERG CO |shot that was exceedingly well|to the Sap Francisco team of the ae |j| 217% Pike St. Beattle, Wash an4) handled, and nursing the balls care-| Pacific Coast league and will re- The third game of the high jfully, Stevens early took the lead,! port there for spring practice, FULLERTON TELLS OF RING TRAGEDY, WHEN JOE RIVERS WAS KNOCKED OUT BY UNKNOWN nation is today at the | the human voice, with its slightest inflec- | of which is not even approached in all the other | very | which this tiny, almost imaginary impulse, made up of as many as 2,000 separate vibrations a second, can be y a delicate trument, conserved over a 3,400 miles, an luced perfectly and ross the continent human voice has t to travel as fast as light, faster than sound | unaided by technical apparatus; indeed, it rivals THOUGHT, even, in the swiftness of its flight The imagination can but feebly grasp, much less attempt to measure, the far-reaching significance of such a tremendous accomplishment One hundred Truly, This Is The Triumph of The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company Love’ roland | closer union, the better comradeship that the must eventually yield to the understanding, the more intima human voice establishes. The neighborliness of a whole nation is advanced by the prashing say" of the physical restraints of centuries. This contribution to the future happiness and pros- perity of a more closely united people has not been brought about, however, by the overcoming of a few | isolated, concrete difficulties. Its success has depended upon the exercise of the highest engineering and tech- nical skill and the solution was found only in the cumulative effect of improvements great and small, in telephone, transmitter, line, switchboard, and every other piece of apparatus or plant required in the transmission of speech. In this work the experimental and research depart- ment of the Bell System of which this Company is a part, has been engaged ever since the telephone became a commercial possibility, less than 40 years ago. With | no traditions to follow and fo experience to guide, this rtment, which is now directed by a staff of over engineers and scientists, including former profess- e cable, | ors, post graduate students, scientific investigators— the graduates of 140 universities—has created an en- tirely new art—the art of telephony, and has grver the people of this country a telephone service that has no equal It ed vast expenditures money and immer ration of effort, but these have been justified by results of ag eapaiss by As benefit to the pub- | lic Che transcontinental telephone line, 3,400 miles long, joining the Atlantic and Pacific, is part of the Bell System of 21,000,000 miles of wire connecting 9,000,000 telephone stations, located everywhere through- out the United States. Composing this system are the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and Asso- ciated Companies and connecting companies, giving uni- versal service to 100,000,000 people. Science FIELD TRIALS BAKERSFIELD, Jan. 27.—The allage stake race in the Pacific Coast field trials here will be com- pleted today, ending the series. It {s believed probable that the win- |ner of this event will be from the | kennels of John Considine of Se attle, Whose dogs won the member ship and derby stakes, DOCTOR Call at the Right Drug Co, 169 Washington st. near Second ave, and have the ex-government physi- clan diagnose your ease and prescribe for you, absolutely without charge. We Want your patronage fer you the doctor's services inducement vk for the Yellow Front, GRAPPLING CHAMP IS NOW IN SEATTLE LOOKING FOR BOUTS Vernon Breedlove, American | featherweight champion wrestler, |of Council Bluffs, In., is in Seattle and issues a blanket challenge to meet any man In the world on the 130 pounds, mat at from 122 to ediove has appeared in more an 500 wrestling matches and has been flopped in but two of them, | jonce by Johnny Billiter at Lincoln fnd once by Walter Keegan, at Rochester, N, Y. Breedlove has been working out with Oliver Runchie, Claude Fort- ner and other Seattle grapplers and {s anxious to stage a match here if he can hook up with any one | nea r his weight. He will put up a |substantial side bet. Letters ad- dressed to Breedlove, care the editor of The Seattle Star, hint sporti will reach Razor Blades Sharpened ALL KINDS OF GRINDING 104 CHERRY ST., AT FIRST AV. fend Shoes and Bindes by Parcel Post, Ehrlich’s Great Cure for Blood Disorders Admin- istered at a Minimum Cost, Come to me for reliable Wasserman Rlood Test. DR. DONAWAY tetsu & m, to 8 p.m, Sundays 10 a m. te 13,