The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 2, 1915, Page 7

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they | nm by al ie re, en ‘% th ver, 61a ¥ WE STAND BACK OF OUR WORK| saan, gel tp ee “ FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE J piney’ strained $15 Set of Teeth, Guaranteed ...... SEATTLE SHOWS SPEED BURST AND WINS. JOHNNY COULON WILL TRY TO COME BACK STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1915, PAGE 7) —IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS—| EDITED BY MAYBEE SMITH JOE BONDS SAILS HERE’S QUES TO FIGHT IN AUSTRALIA— IONS FOR DUGDALE TO ANSWER | TRY A COME-BACK CHICAGO, June 2— Johnny Cou-| more and be strong,” Johnny said lon, Who so long wore the crown! several days ago, “and | know tt. | w is going to try ajalso know that th isn't a 116 ome-ba perience of Jim! pound boy in the game, with the effcies and countjess other gentie-|exception of myself who can men who have essayed similar beat him. Will he f met stunts with disastrous results has | don't know, but Pll ow it so no terrors for Johnny. He is as| bot for him if he don't that he will confident that he will win back the| havo a sweet time trying to square championship as he is of anything.| himself with the tans He has Johnny, howev hasn't lived 28) never given me a return fight any years for nothing. He knows a lot! way, whtch is contrary to all ring of tricks yet, even if hé is an &x-| precedent Lam going to post champ, and he is basing his hopes| $ for him to meet me at 116 yo take the title away from Kid; pounds Williams an two things— is Johnny hasn't be Idle sin that he really beliévea hé packs a Williams defeated him tn Calif big enough Wallop to put the Balt! a year or so ago. He always w more Dane away The other is aja cl ive and he has no’ wellhfounded = b at Williams aban f boxing ] a can no longer e pounds, the an ex, He constantly in train jegitimate bant Inmit, and ing spen of bin time strong--all the expostulations of away m the littl cigar ate Sammy Haris to the contrary that bears his name up on the Williams ¢ant 116 any square make The Stacy Showns defeated the;scraten hits, and the heavy stick Green Lakes Sunday, # to 6. The) work of the college boys feat * were the hitting and field Batt s—Fort Ward Smoke tng of Wilson and Dav Thompson and Johnson; Wilson's, and the sensational cate Kid Mcivor and Mahoney Smith at Third for t Witsons have afe w open dates McDonald featured behind the bat) “| thea : for three innings until his finger 2%¢ would like to schedule games was broken by a foul nd was with Olympia, Mount Vernon and relieved by Melver ewelers Bremerton. A a8 BE P. Welch knocked Trezell out of the box in| 308 Alaska b ing, Seattle the first with five runs. - Rattertes—Show Wilson, Me O'Brien won from Shaner & Donald and Mclvy Green Lakes,| Wolff Sunday, 4 to 2 Sharkey Treaeil, Grimes and Ashby od ball for O'Hrien, only three hits. O'Brien had The Green Lake Cubs forfeited no trouble in co ting freely with their second game in as many Sun- Conroy, getting hits In every ia days when they failed to show up Ging but one ; last Sunday at Duwamish. George) Hatt Shaner & Wolff, Con Smith, manager of the Duwamish|roy and Chisholm; O’Brien, Shar team, advises all teams having key and Cochrane O'Brien will play Portland Cord age team at O'Brien next Sunday with the Green Lake Cubs to-have some security put up to guarantee appearance The South Park Seconds beat the mt Cubs at South F a ltnning battle. At Kent, Memorial day, the Ever. greens lost to Kent, 4 to 3, after 10 to 2 LETTER TO D. E. DUGDAL E WALT MAILS HURLS Dear Dug: As owner of the Seattle baseball team, in the auc Do you want the fans of Seattle to believe that Manager cons of which hundreds of fans who no longer attend the games Dillon of the Los Angeles team, in a Clas@ AA league, ie such a are interested, you are in the position of a semi-public man and 290 as to pay money for a man who could nat make good In a : Class B league tea They have stood for a lot of things from The Star feels free to ask you a few questions regarding the playing you, but don't you think you are spreading it on a trifle phick in and management of your team. The Star will be glad to give you spote? the space to reply to them Ian't It true that with big gues cutting thelr player mit ge ee ‘ “ When The Star first learned of the sale of First Baseman to the bone, that there are hundreds of od men looking for jobs Young Waiter Malis pitched ” 4 ent! put ¢ ainly the Giants Beatty to Los Angeles and asked you about it, did you not say that and that you could sign a good team if you wou the price? xreat for the attle tearm he © made eff to “get hep” to Heatty had not been sold, but that one of several exchange propos! In the event that you answer that you are paying as much in Tuend aden Pata Moy: a the result wae by tion him made by you had been secepted? salaries ax any team in the league, does it not prove that both you Leafs, Hpepmaeye ichgair a fig Reiss rs If so, WHERE 18 THE PLAYER SEATTLE GOT IN EX- and Raymond are poor judges of baseball talent when you will pennant as thelr personal p + game shows whet the team can do CHANGE FOR BEATTY? pick « team flivvers such as Seattle has to put up with thi to six sogttered Bits, whiten ne rot de # to, and the wore ie If it is true that you sold Beatty outright (ax you positively season? them but one run, At the same out for Dugdal and Raymond ts to denied doing) do you not think it a shortsighted polley to dispose In all your years of ®ageball experience, have you not yet time Barth slugged ou * or o Ay h ey don deliver, as of such a good man as Reatty while the ftle team in down deep learned that to draw a crowd to your park you have got to come bagKer iiley, | mar and | they di Soy Fr wi . gre - at the bottom of the h Can you not see that such a polley somewhere near giving the crowd the wort! it# money? Don't dor o} g oy m that Rapp f grabbing the dollar before your nose to the sacrifice of an already ‘you know that a» long as you continues to bunk the fans that your . Jghoreshe gee, s a < weak team is BUNKING THE FANS? K receipts will look Uke an infant class collection at Bunday a sg was 7 he ir eo to e08 1D 6 In a telephone conversation you told the sporting editor of sehool? ¢ ne was fast anc D The Star that Beatty “was not going good,” and that it was your If you care to answer these questions and make an effort to D, end the Benctle team showed 4 Tete fe’ the dex seen Intention to release him anyway, if the deal with Los Angeles fell set yourself right before thesSeattle fans, The Star will gladly en} burst of pep. In the Heat Taree | nepcay gam thru give you the space to do #o. A fo 7 Lo BR Ley: seach | featti An HPO & pitcher, and the ha f K t am t on the ball remained there! t ‘ oo. 4 j = ~ thruout the game 4 : : § | WEST SIDERS WIN | tal i ae Seatie scored the first run in the | lode ib 2 « ° ” ° CJ How They Stand {/BUSH IS COBB'S CHIEF AID IN ehird when Salty soe with wo | 2% +3 $e In the Leagues The West Seattle high school ?'l m by eh ee, ad : Tne | Matte : i 0 */9oam KEEPING TIGERS UP IN THE RACE noe (2 Ne ag |e et prt pcg igh rb sooagre type se 0 : : NORTUWEETERN 1 UR RESULERS matches of the high school tourna-| Kelly maced a th mugger out to} y\ictora A a ae At Ve ° ‘ Me {ment on the courts of the Seattle cente ger Fae > Gd AlODR| Butler, wx os 4 Ab ° ka a f ged ship after that, |#haw 1 | Tennis club Tuew all three of UNE ian ra He i. 4 : 1. NATIONAL LEAGUE RESULTS their candidates in the singles win-| eine he t dup in ¢ he f a | 4 7 . Broadway finished with he and cut off any possible | a» t ‘6 * ¢ A ‘ “ remaining, Queen Anne and) gcores °1 6am At Pittebure ae n with two each and the as 0 1 0 33m Lincoln team was eliminated Mails was the hero of a perfect Totals 1 4 6 S30 : | |"You know me, Al; 1 was hypno-| Score by innings pe fe toa bt nage oki tised or it wouldn't have happened” | Sesttie 104630 nt age 4, Betven 1 CAMPBELL IS BACK play in the fifth. Nye led off with cicbene. tte oom | & ingle and Raymond sacrificed. | Kelly hite—Kitiitay, ‘Barth, FRDERAL LEAGUE RESULTS Malis laced out a hot lin too tor- | Morse : at gone & Estas 1.” Ray Campbell, the lightwelght! rq to handle, and Nye scored, Mails |#*™ort® At Broskiyn 2, Newer J boxer, is back in Seattle with bis|ianding on second. He evidently | jase : manager, H. E. Lindberg, after a|tigured his work for that inning was Wild pitchesMalls, Ieonard. Ume COAST LEAGUE RESULTS successful invasion of Eastern box: yer, and turned around to count the|Pires—Lynch and Frary. Time of game— 6b A net ee ee j!ng centers. Cam appeared in| stripes on the flag, when he was|''* NOMTHW EATERY LEAGUE sexeral bouts at Buffalo and was! nabbed 10 feet from the base, with | Won, Lost, Ret beaten but once He will 100k) his back turned. Five minutes later | Spokane s 8 around Seattle for several days to! 4 ree was caught asleep off ae 4 see what ts stirring for him in a|the same sack, but with these two ean wl fistic way and If there ts nothing! exc fon usher stuff was con-} June 2.—Spokane Vancouver doing will go to bis ranch in Call-| spicuous by its absence. red. slugfest here yam soatt seiale fornia - day afternoon, driving Hughes from 1 LEA w rk AMERICAN apparently having the game won, The Park boys had a comfortable > ‘7 ; thru dumb base running jead until the sixth, when Day of!! R i Batteries—Evergreens, Bingaman the Cubs was yanked and replaced and Payne; Kent, Snell and Pick.) by McKinley The Cubs evened | ¥™ ens. The A. 0. U. W. will play at matters in the eighth frame. Ozar, Bellevue Sunday South Park's twirler, wou bis own et —— game when he singled, Staman! Pit's>ure r+ Wilson's Modern Business College scoring from second. gute . 2 ae defeated the Fort Ward team Sun-| South Park plays the Wolverines, x. a : 88 day, 7 to 0. The features were thé) at South Park from 1 to 3 pw jst As : pitching of Kid Mclvor, who struck| Sunday. For games call H. Weat,/ 2" i 4 out 15 men, and allowed but two Sidney 1189, or Spalding’s Bufta, 2 aes SHEPHERD COMPARES U. S. FORCES WITH THE ALLIES | rush By Wm. G. Shepherd | | Trne enough, the roads in the United Press Stat regen ys ag wh Vera Croz @istrict were jungle (Copyriented. pyrighted in HEADQU ARTERS but miles of roads have been in Europe since the war be paths, THE bullt ‘OF BRITISH ARMY, Northern France,/ san, solely for military transport (By Mail to New York.)| services, as our men could have April 21 be butlt them if the need arose —A year ago | was with the Ameri can army at Vera Cruz, and, tho; The thing that strikes me now is conditions there were highly dif-/that Gen. Huerta’s Mexican army ferent from those prevailing here,|/that I saw so much of during the nevertheless the opportunity for| months before his downfall DID measuring the American army by| have motor transportation what I see of the British army is} Had Learned in Europe too obvious to be overlooked. i shed about Their great Lorriea ;up the idea of military transports ‘The little green autos with long wooden seats which could carry 12 Mexicans, would have hurried Mex fean soldiers around into spots where Gen, Funston might not have expected to find them, and got them away again before the Amer! cans could jay either their hands or their bullets on them. Britieh Army Lacks Mules This is not meant to aay that the American army is @ithout gasoline Jand transporte Perhaps the “war experts” J depart » first thing that strikes me/the capital and in 4he mountain Mexico who advised the war “eal we Poy have underesti-| roads; their armored fighting cars’ ment as to conditions, gave iIl- transport were ready everywhere aftvice. nee aria, set a angie automo. 1 suppose some of the Mexican However, the fact remains that bile transport on the boats which officers who had been trained inj Funston was sent to Vera Cruz . without gasoline transporte; and brought Gen. Funston’s troops wa, Fe schools of Europe had picked Vera Cruz. ber Would Have Been a “Crawl” | If “Forward into Mexico” bad been the orders from Washington,) it is easy to understand, judging from what I've seen of automobile transport in the European war, that Funston's forward march would have been a crawl instead of a tod datly by 2. W. Godwin @ Co.+ | Artichokes, dom .... “ Asparagus. tb “a @ Beets, sack 20 @ Bananas | Cabbage | Gal lemons, per crate o OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY 2°. eo cherries Missing teeth are replaced by) ‘The Ohio Method by artificial teeth | £ that are natural as your original | teeth. Examinations are now being) F conducted without charge, and estl- mates are furnished in all cases. | Gooneberrie Mi matoos $10 Set of Teeth, Guaranteed $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown 10 Gold or Porcelain Bridge Work Solid Gold Fillings $1 Up! 9 Other Fillings -50¢ @: MAREE? REPORT °° @1t Onions on e 150 ae 5 50 49.00 grins 04% 00M Hens, 4 Ibe ead over a4 Hens, 2% ty a3 Mens, 3 fhe, and under, 10 Spring ducklings, over 2% toa 014 roe tere, live block hogs larger bs, E008 ai Veal. large . oT Belling Prices Office Hours, 8 80 to 6. Sundays, 9 to 12. aD « " nite h eriort of As | OHI Cut - Rate inn" isliiverm “Fruas, and wive tree) signa Coin + trial to pr ¥ tee 2 yo A Dentists "4" UNDBERG CO. | Yu"iesatt 207 UNIVERSITY 8T. CORNER SECOND AVE. russes, Deformity Appliances and : Artificial Limbs. 1107 THIRD AVENUB 9 I Getermine your needs b graduate of one oft od States, Tam a } 4 experience In my profession: I EXAMINE FREE ital orem Nerves, Liver, Varicose Veins, Blood and Skin Kidney and Bladder, Vartcocels, cele. 606" oF "914" for Blood Dt Come to me tor reilable Was Blood Test DR. DONAWAY, 302 Liberty Building Union and Third, Opposite Postotiice Office Hours, 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, 10 a, m. to 12. omve had 30 youre in Btomach, Disorde: Hydro. weat disorders of the Heart. Kozema tees Select ranch | * - 1] Country May and Grain i (Prices paid producer) Altaita, Mo. 1 : i timothy Country Hay and Grain (Wholesale ‘Prices No. 1 +1800 rn Washington sound oats Timothy Wheat in} Don for the excellent showing of the T! ip the leavening influence on a broken inf $f] in defense and, as usual, helping the run getting by getting to first as|in the next frame He is regarded as Eddie Collins’ closest rival in| | often even as Cobb | worrying pitchers into giving ba the Mexicans had automobile trans porta that were fitted for Mexican roads Returning to the comparison be tween the British and the Vera Cruz-Amer! army, the lack of mules is noticeable with the British The great Missouri jacks that outlast a horse and follow, like cows or sheep, the tinkling bells of their leaders, are only beginning to be enlisted in the British army The British have plenty of horses. In fact, thelr army affords one great and splendid horse show of beautiful animals that have been developed through their system of) racing. American horses are not an un. common sight, however, but they've got half brothers at home In Mis sourt who would have stood the journey over here just as well as they did, and would have done half again as much work in the mud of Flanders. | The great Flanders horses mous thruout the world, are jtiful and strong “Rut they have no nerve,” said eg English army bostler. ‘When \they get sick they give up the j fight and lay down and die, bbs * FREE -DOCTOR Cali at the Right Drug Co. 169) | Washington st, near Second ave, e the ex-government physl- nose your ease and prescribe for you, absolutely without charge. We want your patronage and of- fer you the doctor's services inducement, fur the Yellow Front. Is He With The Combine? smbine oF ny.of the TD | {lets recently this Dent by our grentest atutes aul and imp. by the tints The 1 were Hoensed by the In thin state, and the best I re blacklisted by This very Dentiat- who now claims that all hia nsed jhas had ma | hin. office Any Dentist who t# insine Aishonest with his fel o% ‘ombtn belittle those who are fg ting fc right and Mberty the Incompe competition, or tists, who fight for right EDWIN J. BROW tent Block. wilt | BUSH. By Hugh S. Fullerton Bush, Detroit's grand little shortstop, is largely responsibie gers this spring. The little veteran id and is playing great ball on balls, there. This is a complaint that has n heard against the Amer y’ mule, which is likely to kick a man to death while he's dying Gen. Funston took plenty of him to Vera Cruz, together with big army wagons that the Ameri can mule flirts around with A Difference in Flying The flying men with Funston at Vera Cruz belonged to the navy, not to the army No one in the army |had any chance for practice under war conditions at Vera Cruz | There were no spots around the Mexican seaport where a land ma chine could have alighted and, of B. TAYLOR Ideal Shoe Repair Shop Surgical Boot Specialist Over 2 flying corps years’ practical expert- latest machinery, bert ma All repairing while you Phone Main 1068 ance. terials. walt 1023 Pike Street Opposite W m Motor Car Co. Pacific Salmon Company |] win continue to ship Satmon, aver- |] aging # pounds, dresped, tn Individual | es, to any point In the U. All Charges Prepaid, $1.25 teed to arrive in perfect con- Also Crabs, Smelt, Trout, |] Kipperea mon and all products, See the fish befo |] tt you wisn. 601 Northern Bank Bldg. Main 6576 EXCURSIONS = P.S.Navy Yard :|One F Hour’s Ride on Puget : Sound | 1} | 6. 8S. H. B. Kennedy and Tourist | | Leave ‘olman Doek 6:30, 8:00, the} WIN IN SLUGFEST VANCOUVER, Tacom B. C., June 2.—The Tigers knocked Brand from the box Tuesday and landed hard on Hunt, who replaced him. This aided by loose fielding, enabled t nh to run up a score of 14 to 6 against Vancouy Tacoma 03047 |Vancouver ..000101 uM 20 0 The Vans won a 6 to 5 contest }from Newcastle in the coal town Sunday in 10 innings. The Vans tied the score In the ninth. and hits by Carle and Blosel won for th The batt re Roddy teve and Perch. and ies | Mitchell and| The ruff stuff came to the surface |/the mound in the seventh, and win- in the fourth, when Cadman was/ning easily by a acore of 9 tol, called out at third by Mike Lynch} —— when he made for that sack on Kaylor and Cad-} Barth's double to center made a grea en to Shaw, JOE BONDS TO SAIL man was safe, but Lyneh, umpirt bases, figured the shade the other 0 AU: ALIA was peeved, but that was no exc SAN FRANCISCO, June 2.— for his cursing so loud that his pro-|| Jack Kearns will sail for th fanity could be heard over the | Antipodes Tuesday with Rex _\kreater part of the grandstand Watson, Billy Murray, Billy wh sat a number of ladies. No choicer language could be heard at Billy the Mug’s than that used by Cadmon while it lasted. Such lan. guage, however, is not calculated to! attract ladies to the ball park Kramer, Ray Temple and Joe Bonds, under his management, and each of the five will x five ring matches at Sydney during the next five months. “Snowy” Baker has guaran- teed this number of bouts for each, but the identity of their opponents is not known. It may or may not be due to the few remarks addressed to Dugdale and the Seattle team by The Star |‘ Jnecessity, the work was all done by water machines In the British army war flying has been brought to its highest ef- ficiency If the American fiying man wants to equal his British brother, he must be ready to climb into the air in any wind. | Snow, rain, hail and even dark- ness must not stop him. There is a world of differ- ence between those hot sum- mer days at Fort Meyer, in 1908, when the Wrights were showing their machine to the American army officials and would not go into the sky until | all the flags were hanging limp air, and these war days of 1915, when an Eng- lish flying man fii in tor. | nadoes if nece: SCHOOL GIRLS | IN “VICE GANG” RICHMOND, Cal., | existance an organized |high school girls of this city ts }being probed today by city and county officials and a committee of) citizens as an outgrowth of the ar- rest of Jesse Tingstrom, 24, danc ing master, on a charge of tributing to the delinquency Sandelle Gadsberry, a minor Seven letters from high girls received by Tingstrom in his} cell In the county jail, furnished | the clue which led gation. One of an June 2.—The “vice gang” of young of missive signed “Grace” is unusually startling nature. The investigation is being led by] Mayor Gerard and members of the} Richmond counetl The investigation will include a probe of conditions in Richmond dance halls, skating rinks and road | houses. SAN FRANCISCO, June successive Sundays of rain proved too much for the California state league of baseball clubs, and an nouncement was made today that ||it had been disbanded the attendance to almost | Modesto, Oakland San Jose, Alameda | were represented tains cut nothing Cc. M Chriatiansen a contractor, {and Miss T. 3. Moore, Seattle's | first June wedding principals, set the pace for other couples who obtained lic | auditor's offic sen oat the Tuesday ve APARTMENT ROBBED county 10:30 a. m.; 1:30, 2:00: 5:30 p, m.| Burglars entered the apartment Visitors Welcome Daily of G. A. McMullen, at 1202 Pine FARE, st, Tuesday night with a pass key, Chiidren, 5 to 12, 25c. 5Qc ROUND TRIP | obtaining Jewelry valued at $200. of what Is believed to be| con:| | school | to the Investi- | LEAGUE GOES bust Six | CHRISTIAN CANNED e. “ five | SAN FRANCISCO, June De-| In at fae a {spite depiais from President they’re done | Leavitt and other officials of the |ACOBS HOTO SHOPS laud, there Is ttle foubt Tyler J peed PHO PI. Bids. | Christian, manager of the Oakland ° club, has beey relieved of his du- tles and that’a new soon be appointed Christian 1s trying to connect with either Venice or Los Angeles. director will KODAK FINISHING Let me do your work. “Quick service—good results.” H. MENDENHALL em and Camera Specialist ts Swift's—Secoad at Pike The Vans defeated the White Sox 6 to 2, Sunday, La Fray and Mitchell serving as the battery for the vic- tors. La Fray allowed but five hits Visit the Expositions ON YOUR WAY EAST VIA THE FAMOUS | | | REMEMBER THAT A ONE-WAY TICKET TO THE EAST VIA THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC THROUGH CALIFORNIA COSTS PRACTICALLY THE SAME AS VIA THE DIRECT NORTHERN LINES ASK THE |SOUTHERN PACIFIC 720 SECOND AVE Cc. G. CHISHOLM, District Frt. and Pass Agent. Phone Elliott 1256, Seattle, Wash. |

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