The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1915, Page 9

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ABERDEEN BEATS SEATTLE IN POOR CONTEST— YOUNGER PLANS GRID ) GAME WITH U. OF C, STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1915. PAGE 9 ° —IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS— EDITED BY HAYBEE SMITH BIG LEAGUE MAGNATES SHOW SIGNS OF BEING WILLING TO END BASEBALL WAR | WHEN WILL THIS CROOL WAR END? 0. B. MAGS ARE GETTING HUNGRY “By Kaybee Major league magnates are | growing’ tired of the lean days which are a direct result of the | war between organized base. » ball and the Federal league. tn no way i this more clearly evi- denced than In today's advice from Boston which say that Ban Johnson, president of the American league, looks with fa- vor upon the proposal of Philip 8B 1, president of the Federal gue, to drop litigation pend: | ing between the two organiza tions, In other words, Ban and the other O. B, magnates have had enough of it and are paving the way fo swallowing the bit- ter Fed. do Baseball peace really is in sight The magnates at last are admitting what all knew from the mo- ment the Federal league proved it could live through one year and still show strong financial backing That is, that only a compromise and readjustment could save the entire fabric of organized baseball The National league--or a ma jority of the owners—would have welcomed a settlement last winter Grasping selfishness on the part of two owners prevented the step. Selfish Attitude The American league has held a} rather selfish attitude throygh the entire fight. It realized at th Federal league was hurting the Na tional more than ft was the Ameri- #an. and there are quite a number of the American league owners who did not and do not care much whether the National or the Fed eral survives. | Charles A. Comiskey, the biggest single power in baseball, has been for peace from the first. Unfor. patty, the war started while be/ on a trip around the world j The present movement for peace may be balked even now by the Murphy-Taft, Robinson- Ebbetts interests. There is evidence that strong po- Utical ure was brought to bear) in St. Louis this spring to force the! Britton interests to sell. In Chica-| go public opinion probably will eventually compel Murphy and Taft to get out. It is known that a recent meeting of minor league leaders was heid andthat the minors brought heavy pressure to bear upon the leaders of organized baseball to ehd the} war. | ! hey t asked Tealey Raymond over the) phone this morning what is the mat ter with the Seattle team. He said “I don't know. They don’t seem to} he able to hit or field and they can’t get going right.” Tealey apparently the team sized up about right] d aside from those minor details! BASEBALL DUGDALE FIELD DOCTOR Call at the Right Drug Co. 169 Washington st. neer & 4 and have the ex-government phy: lan diagnose your ease and pre’ for_you, absolutely withou We want your patronage re ae doctor's services as an ind sf “loon for Yellow Froet. the wuyecsortty of tne Lahaber *fruss, god give free trial to prow A. LUNDBERG co. Determity jances an@ Trusses, Detaeicial Limbs | THIRD AVENUB. — | OHIO DENTISTS ONE-PRICE DENTISTS Bes id Cows, $4.00 ind Bridge- $4. 00 Best set of Teeth be set of Tee $5. 00 Best set of h with fale permed 00 Painless Extraction Inetuded We make a specialty tal v4 branches of Dentistry. | work that don’t prove| oe Pri will be made) over free of charge at any, time. All work guaranteed for 12 yea Painless ex- traction. Examination free. 207 University St. Opposite rocenone | Use Star Wants Ads for Re- sults, | negotiations. it Is one of the best baseball teams Seattle er had. “3 sere will be sent In to pitch attic this afternoon and there re chance that the Glants Walter Matis, fond boosters were predict ing would be in the big league 15 or 20 minutes after some tern looked him over, is going is a b will skin the Cats. who contd with all of the grace and speed of a log wagon . When Pat Scott and Chet Neff |get together in four rounds at the Elks’ smoker Friday night, there should be something stirring every minute. Neff is sore over his de feat at the hands of Scott whe: they last met before the Pacific A C., a8 he figures the worst he should have recetved was a draw Pat! went Into that contest with a bum | hand, a smal! done having been! broken, and his mitt ts still sore, the X-ray showing that the frac ture never healed. The hand, how ever, fails to bother the boxing in structor and he is confident (hat he can repeat his previous perform anc more decisively, so jthat Neff wilt have no room left for talk of an earned draw, The uniforms worn by the New York Yankees have been given to the convict team tn Sing Sing. The majority of New Yorkers wish the| with the} contents uniforms. had been sent Now they are declaring C. Webb Murphy is in the baseball p ‘That guy is fust as peaceable as Gen. von Hindenbur; Iilinois now wants local option in horse racing. Under the plan one | bait of one per cent of the voters may caure every one in the county to vote as to whether or not horse racing shall be permitted. It is} certain that one-half of one per cent in each county will want horse) racing, and about 20 per cent of, the total will good naturedly vote for what the one-half of one per cent asks them to vote fo Ite a man who, in the face of the} present wave of reform, insists upon trying to rev a game that | dled of pernicious erookedne JIMMY CLABBY WINS | NEW YORK, May Jimmy Clabby was given a newspaper de. eclsion over Al McCoy after a 10- round bout in Brooklyn last night. Clabby outboxed McCoy from the start, but was unable to put him out, “ee Hee |MEN WHO MAY BALK | PLANS OF PEACE IN | i} | Top to bottom, Charles Murphy lof Chicago Cubs, Charles P. Taft, his backer, and Charles “Holiday” Ebbets of Brooklyn. MAPLE LEAFS ARE | TACOMA, May & lw —In a game that scoreless until the fifth frame, Tigers yesterday Victoria team in the of the series, § to won the game in the eighth, when they pushed five runs over the pan, at the start of the tnning. | was plentiful thruout the game ir ictoria ~0000203 00-5 Tacoma 000003058 eee ® BLACK CATS BASEBALL cOMBAT ARE VICTORS _IN BUM GAME j league plays a team that Is working hard) a to get Into ¢hag basement | attle, fans at the game and a@ natural lack jof enthusiasm, teams put up such an exhibition of the neased at Dugdale’s lot yesterday well in baseball and, altho he was not entirely to! | blame, it took the Giants six in nings before they could reach a } frame in which the Black Cats did} | not score fer, and what he did offer was eat en alive up in anything, | featuros of thetr work tn the first | inning, and this standard was fair. jly well maintained | the first five tnnings, and then Wal-| ter Mails was sent to the hil | his | Smith's, and while be did stop the carnage, tightening up of the entir after {t was too late to be of t fit ttory of a real filvver game. same teams will noon at 3 o'clock, defeated the}, ond CamMe|ia ¢ tnn © Tigers)!» with a margin of two against them eau e Hitting | When a team basement, reposing in the as is Aberdeen is Be-| reity of| there is a natural » but when the two national pastime as that wit why wonder that local interest flagging? | The nts again demonstrated | heir woeful lack of pitching talent Smith had little to of Seattle failed to back him three errors being If a Giant could he couldn't hold it gathered nine runs tn the ball, Aberdeen but} | wing was than ttle better it was due to a neral am, pne The box score tele the sad, aad The meet this after | ‘The Seore | au ® A ° } e} Lawl « Kitien, Me o Hanne T rune and § bite off ®mith 2 rons and 6 tings, 3 rune innings; § rune and 6% Innings. Credit rae Gofeat to Smith. Umplre—Frar eummar in 2% Metkie hi Galbraith, Bacon & Co. win con- jtest for land in Snohomish county —s' containing valuable lime deposits. out 11 men, ‘(BRITISH READY FOR THE SLAUGHTER see ee 1| men, >| Donald. jthe Seattle How They Stand In the Leagues VARSITY 11 HOM: PLAY DEEP 2" BASEMAN | a. READY ‘TO PLAY SHORT CENTER AND SHORT RIGHT FIELD The Ballard Tigers defeated the Green Lake Come making thelr eighth straight victory, The game was featured by the pitching of McLaughlin, who whiffed and t vy hitting of th Tigers, particularly Andreson. |games with the Tigers, phone Ha |lard 702 between 6 and 7 p. m. The it Silverdale team won from Poulsbo Sunday by a score of 9 to Bill Y. Yohe, former Ta coma player, starred for Poulsbo, | while Frost and Hanson were the| mainstays of Silverdale. Batteries | —For Poulsbo, Iverson and Lind quist; Silverdale, Sibley and Me-| The Vans won their third! straight victory’ Sunday by defeat ing the Duwamish team, 17 to 10 The game was featured by the| pitching of Roddy and the home runs. by his teammates, Batteri Vans—Roddy, Mitchell and Plowf Duwamish—Simpson and Smith O'Brien won easily Sunday from A als by a score of Batteries for Aertals—Pep- | who struck four men, al singles and! Batteries for Cochrane, struy five tol per and Williamson, out four men, walked lowed 18 hits, six soven two-baggers. O'Brien — Sharkey, Scheld and Gleason, who allowed six hits, ae eee BIG ARMY A MARVEL OF EFFICIENCY By Wm. G. Shepherd United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyrighted, 1915, by the United Press; Copyrighted in Great Britain ) HEADQUARTERS OF THE BRITISH ARMY, NORTHERN FRANCE, April 19.—(By Mail to New York.)—1 have seen the en- tire British line. it is the stop- per which Gen. French put into the neck of the German bottle at the battie of Ypres when the German tide began to pour Ca- lale way. This English line is in the ox- act spot In where Gen. Nog!, the Japanese master of war, once said would occur a battle that would stagger the world, if war In Europe became @ reality. Here's the war, here's the place and here are the British. Perhaps the battie of Ypi was the battle that Gen. Nogi had in mind. It occurred tast Qctober, and it was a score of Waterioos and Gettysburgs rolled into o1 for the number of men engaged and for the casualties. But it will take a bigger battle than that for the Germans to the battle Nog! dreamed of? Or was that battle only a To ‘unner of a greater battle which Gen, French and his English soldiers have before them within the coming months? Whatever is ahead, the army of Gen, Sir John French is ready . War Ypres for it. It is a good army oe 8 The first thing that strikes A about the British army is its quiet men, I saw six horses t to run away the other day, when a regiment of men cheered Gen French after he had thanked them in his quiet way for the part they had taken in the battie of Neuve Chapelle Cannons, the horses know Cheers are strange to them. Jt dawns on an American slow ly, that, in the mind of an Eng sh army man, noise and effi-- clency do not go together, “o* Compared with the small por: tion of the army that landed nt Vera Cruz a year ago, the organ- ‘zation of the British army ts perfect Tho the American army had been waiting in a state of pre paredness for orders to go into Mexico, when it finally did land in Vera Croz the army horse shoers found themselves without sufficient horseshoeing — equiy ment, and for many days the were forced to shoe mules and horses with small sets of tools intended only for the march, An American 1s therefore apt to be misled by the lack of noise and fuss among the British. But careful observation will soon dispel any doubts as the state of efficiency of Gen. French's army in the fighting zone. “Don't have any ceremony,” seems to be the British army man's idea of doing his Job. “ee In the midst of all this quiet and informality and lack of fuss one begins, after a little time, to signs of the utmost effi olency On Neuve dotted | # the battleground, back of Chapelle, the fields are with small white signal boards, They were placed there long before the battle to show wiments where to go when the battle began I noticed many short ladders in the trenches which the British had left when they rushed on Neuve Chapelle. “We made a lot of these lad ders and put them into our trenches, so that our men could BULL BROS. 1013 THIAD MAIN 1043 NAVY YARD ROUTE ftoamers H. B. Kennedy und Tourist Dook, Seattio, 10:30 & m., 1:20, Time (able subjact to change wit notice. ithe ano jee 600 Round Tri FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANCING EVERY BVENINO EV BRY ONE WELCOME RODARE S— “In at one, at five they’re done” JACOBS PHOTO SHOPS Second Floor Bide. Just Printere) | me # climb out quickly when the charge began,” explained an of- fleer. On the battlefield one sees small bridges placed over ditches 80 narrow that any soldier could Jump them with ease, They were for the men to use. Gen. French didn't want any waste motions or waste exer tions {in that battle. We're going to do this the best it can done. he said The result of thin quiet eff! clency was that Neuve Chapelle fell in one hour and a half in stead of ten hours, the time that had been caleulated The only thing that sputters tn be thie British army is powder; the only noise comes from guns vee This self-pousession of the British officer sometimes almost passes bellef. Just as his wom en will stand on the station plat form in Lamdon, as I have seen them; their ¢ lakes of tears, waving good-bye to him fran tically with their handkerchiefs, but never dabbing at a wet eye 2 until he is ont of sight, so will he his hide emotions under the DENTAL and OPTICAL PRICES CUT Pe sult t 4 Times No such low prices strictly high-o ental and Optics ork were ever offer , Seattle or elsewhere, | ou pee y low bard) Edwin J. Brown, D. D. S. Loading Dentist Department, T14 Firat Ave, ve Block. , 105 Kirst Ave, tes oc! 705 ang 713 Optical Open evenings until & and -Sun- 4 until 4 for people whe work, 1 EXAMINE DK. DONAWAY, 4 PRED Bladder for Blo reliable W kane 7] 1 Hin Varicoc or, Stomach, Disor u and wid for Union and Third, Oppoalte Vostottier Office Hours, 9 a.m, to B p.m. Hundays, 10 a m. to 12 greatest strains I sat at a table with officers of the flying corps recently, and they chatted about the most ev eryday things. But all this time they knew that one of their mess was up in the air over the Ger- man line, within range of Ger man shrapnel, and even of Ger man rifles. He came in soon afterward and not until | noticed that they were slapping him on the back with unusual cordinlity did T real ize how well they had hidden their anxiety during the meal, This self-pos sion, is, In fact espectally marked among the British aviators. The old-time fiying man smok ed so many cigarets to prove that he was cool and collected that cigarets, as used by avi ators, became a joke. The Hritiah flying man doesn't try to prove his coolness. He IS coo! and that’s all there's to it 's0, PARK CLEANS UP h Park tered the steamer companied by 300 royal rooters and a J2-pleee band, ran an excdrsion to Anacortes Sunday. South Park fans as usual thelr club heavily and carried away more than $400. The hitting of the South} Park team was terrific, having An acortes fielders chasing atl over the lot, and at the end of the third] inn Washington, Anacortes fa-| pitcher, retired.in favor of ball team char Potlateh and, The Sout hacked Pike, SouthPark pitcher.| South Park scored three runs in| the third, but Anacortes came right| back and tied the score in the fifth and forged into the lead in the} eighth. South Park tied up the score in the ninth, and broke the tie in the 11th, when Brown put the ball over the left field fence for his second home run. With hard smashes to left and right field fence, Hrown for the second time up this inning deliberately walked toward second base and was tagged for the third out, the seore stand ing 10 to 4, Smith, pitehing for South Park, was now working easy and relying on his support, allow ing three runs Batteries: Washington, Pike and Stokke for An es; Harry Smith and Wally for South Park Next Sunday South Park and the Lion Liquor Co.'s all-star Northwest | castoffs will tangle at South Park, | | Following Is the Mne-up, being the !same wrecking crew that slaughter: jed Anacortes Sunday, with one ex- ception. ite Bagg rt a Base |’ WORK STARTED ON NATIONAL LEAGUE RESULTS U OF C TEAM | her Nat nue por > le | | AMERICAN LEAGUR RESULTS | ' How Washing Manager Art Younger of the U. Pega vin e oft W. has a bee buzzing in his bon a net that may turn out to be a foot- | YeDRRAL LEAGUE nesuits | ball game between the University at A } At Ba 8, Chicaw of California and the, Washington TANDINY A games postpor u ANS athe: teams next fall, Younger is anxions | gp one |to take advantage of the suspen- SHORT STOW | 4: He Oakland 6 | sion of athletic relations between : California and Stanford, and hopes | NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE to get the consent of the faculty to Won. Low be oe irrange @ game with the Blue and +4 4 Gold boys in California. ° s4 For several years an open rup- Si, rene ioe Between the two California iia gt ates es has been stewing, as one NATIONAL LEAGUE of them insists in shutting the | Ww *. Pet./freshmen out of the intercollegiate — | 4 44} | contests and the other insists that Rapa - ‘ as|the youngsters be allowed to take i . 6 | part oe 9 ¢ | This year the break came, and it ttn ; now Jooks as if the great Stanford- 4 +; | California football game, the great- est sporting event in California, AMERICAN LEAGUE vill not be played . vt Pe" | ‘This was the chance for Younger t 1“ ‘ »| to get in his hooks, arid, while che i 5 *\ proposition to play the California . “*\ team is not looked upon with par+ 4 ie¢ltieular favor by the Washington phie «| faculty, Younger hopes to show uM *2\them that it would be a great fie |nancial, as well as athletic, move ct, | and expects to convince the pow- s\ers that be of its wisdom. The | greatest objection {s the expense 4 lentalled in sending the Washing- ton squad South, but if a sufficient | guarantee is made to cover this ex- | pense, Washington should worry. FEDERAL LEAGUE | Kansas City ... singles and one two-bagger. O'Brien plays the Wilson's Business Col team at O'rien next Sun day The Seattle Racing Pigeon club* — | Y. M. TENNIS COURTS vancouver SHUTS —itic'ostaney san "the bmi ee] THE INDIANS QUT =a srt j peting. The first bird arrived at the loft VANCOUVER, May 5.—With cle C. Bauwens at 9: making Hunt pitching with the precision of}, 025.19 yards per minute. 1.) machine, and with splendid sup-| Following is the result in full: in port, the Vancouver team shut out) Competitor. Yds. per Min, | the Spokane Indians here yesterday} C, Bauwens Madison was begun Tuesday by the physical department of the Y. M ©. A. The courts will be avatlable m, to 9 p always for playing from 6 a with attendant an The tennis privileges will be lim a ox {ted to a club compromised of the | bY the score of 2 to 0 | H. Thompson pokane . 00000000 0—0/L. V. Gregson . first 100 men who file their appli-| >) e_elp Lobb cations with Physical Director | Vancouver .. 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 °—2)P. 4 reer ace Sherry Rerthiaume. Tennis shoes ea S. WATSON etd and racquets will be checked free AN v ; Bettman . cro® e atree ue ssociation tl . 5 . * rose the treet at the Associatio M DOT , 4 246-mile fiy from agent Oe Besides the tennis games, the Y.| SUPERIOR, Wis May 5.—Joe| Som. has been subesitated ton, ye: M. C. A. plans a number of summer | Mandot, w Orleans lightweight, 19, The mile race will re activities, including the “Hiuland Red Watson of California are a Skookum Camp" at Seward penin-| matched to box ten rounds here Sage from Roseburg, Oregon, May suls, already open, a ten-day hike! May 28, They will weigh in at 134 jto the summit of Mt. Rainter, a| pounds number of six-day camps at 8 & Holeh’s last night, Ginnold de~ beck and the usual summer camps GINNOLD WINS IT feated Wolfe, 25 to 17, and Leary! | for boys on Orcas island. beat Bostwick in a fast gam Annual Alumni day at Broadway rved Tuesday VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Evidence of Remarkable J Cures Was Produced in Court On January 7th, of this year, Doctor J, Eugene Jor dan was arraigned before the State Medical Board and his leense to practice medicine revoked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vertisement reproduced, which had been running tn the local newspapers, was untrue, that Doctor Jordan could not cure the diseases mentioned therein, Doctor Jordan appealed to the courts in the matter and to 8. Leary made a high run In the three-cushion billiard |four, filling his string in 28 tourney for the city title at Brown _nings. : of} De You Know of Any Other Physician Who Can Do Itt September 24, 1918, T was taken Gown with acute Bright's Disease last Febru- the trial of the case which ary and was not expected to recover. I became so dropsical followed, in the Superior that I could hardly move in bed. My condition became go des- Court, produced evidence of erate that the doétors in attendance held out ne hope. Doctor y Bugene Jordan was suggested as a last resort and as I had a character that caused nothing to lose and everything to gain, I started to “use his Judge’ Walter M. French to Glandular Remedies. I began to mend ‘at once and in three award a decision to Doctor months not « partiole of albumen could be found where before Seal bs it was loaded with it. I gained back the hg f= nm pounds that Jordan, restoring to him his I had lost and my kidneys are as good as they were before, lcense, (Signed AD GOINGS, 8016 Tweltth Avenue Northwest, testimontal, Itke th Judge French stated in his decision The abo y others which have ap- mi the thoroughness and perma~ The court cannot find tn peared in this Journal this case that any credulous nency of Doctor J. a ene Jordan res of Tuberculosis, Asthma, " “! Anaemla, india Ulceration of or Ignorant persons have Chronte been deceived. On the other ditory Nerves, Diabetes, Prolapsus hand, the witnesses who 4 A (skin eae have been produced on bé- Unclu@ing Heart Leakage), half of Doctor Jordan are * nity, Jauacien aed ne fal i, Ment ithe, © ie " aralysia, Locomotor ate, ni n | ry bed pee eh ate alls EEMY curvature, déreblemue, Bt Vit ceratton of Stom> city. Profeasional —peaple, eth cr Bowels anid most other so-called inoureble diseases, people of standing in the an eaiilin A hale Ardell eitiaa a nM T y Doctor J, Bugene Jordan ts fully accredited physician under Leip ogy Lad yi are the Inws of the State of Washington and is an ex-professor of epown {0 the Court person: Chemistry and Toxicology of the Hahnemann College and Hospital ally and people who are of Chicago, Nl. He has practiced in Seattle continuously for the known to the citizens of this past city generally a8 being Thore being @ number of Doctors Jomlan tn Seattle, it 1s well among the best people in the to bear in mind the full name and address of Dootor J. Eugene city, And I don't think that Jordan, 619% First Avenue, Seattle, Office hours, 9 a m. to 8 Dh it can be contended | that m.; Sundays from 2 p, m, to 6 p, m. Consultation free, Wateh ; bh Wednesday Star for remarkable cures. they were either credulous or ignorant except as the laity generally is somewhat ignorant of medical matters, (Advertisement on which charge of Medica! Board was based.) to involve moral twPpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan and Judgment will, therefore, be for Boctor Jordan. GREATER VINDICATION COULD NOT BE DESIRED The Medical Board claimed that these diseases were incurable, meaning, of course, that they could not cure them, Doctor Jordan not only claimed to cure them, but produced tn court scores of actual: ly cured pattent as witnesses for his case. The stortes of their remarkable cures have been stated under oath, Pector Jordan has caused this statement to be published in order to acquaint the public and his many friends with the proven facts in the case, There {8 no contention here that any medicine has been given which is at all harmful, In fact, all of the testimony fn this case seems to show, as far as that is concerned, that any medicine that ever has been administered by Doctor Jordan has tended to benefit Ge patient. There Is no contention on the part of the State, it so stated by counsel for the State, that there was anything In this advertisement that was injurious to public morals fo that f gets down to whether or not this ad- vertisomentois so grossly untrue as to involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan, Under all the testimony fn this case, I cannot find that the advertisement {8 eo grossly untrue as and

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