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MeNED . Genera. STAPF Teaine The University of W. ing- ton, with its seven r cham plonship record, ie naturally the big question mark of 1916 | schedule makers. Graduate | Manager Arthur Younger says | Washington will not talk busi ness with any conference team about a 1916 game until after the conference meeting in Port- land, when a lot of these ques- tions will be decided. Dr. J. F. Bohble Washington State's new faculty director, talked very favorably with Younger about agreeing to the non-freshman for 1916, but Bohler indicates that he does not know just what his vote ts going to be on that question yet depending upon what the other colleges of the conference wil! do. declares he has been advised ¢ Oregon school will favor the barring of freshmen, and he is Uncertain how much, if anything, Would be gained by breaking with them and forming a new Coast non freshman conference with Washing ———$ POTTER THINKS — 1915 BROADWAY TEAM THE BEST Some critics are in doubt as to whether Broadway's present team is as good as that of last y' Capt. Roy Potter was asked for his opinion, and he made the reply that the 1915 team was as good as the 1914, if not better. He seems to think that the present team has more speed than the 1914 squad. Al- this may be doubted by a great many, it is well to remem- ber that Clyde Coleman's speed was responsible for the rest of the team hurrving up motion | of the squad. | | This year no one will doubt the fact that George Overton is fast on the hoof; the same is true of Capt. Potte Lou La | Fray, while a big man, is in no sense of the word slow. Then there is Bili Feek to be reckon- ed with, along with Dank Reese, a sub halfback. The line also it shown in the Lincoln and Ballard gam It is interesting to note the fact | that Broadway wil! be supplied with a large number of letter men for next year. This is made possible thru the syste used by Coach Henderson, who has an eye for the future, ade | tall many coaches overlook. No AR ————— OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replaced by The Ohio Method by artificial teeth | that are natural your original | feeth. Examinations are now being @onducted without charge, and estt | Mates are furnished fn all cases. STAND BACK OF OUR Work! FOR 12 YEARS’ GUARANTEE $15 Set of Teeth, Guaranteed $10 Set of Teett, Guaranteed $10 Solid Gold or Porcelain spb . 10 Gold or Porcelain | $ Bridge Work ...... $4) Solid Gold Fillings .. Other Filling: seeroesece | Office Hours, 8:20 to 6. Sundays} 9 to 12. Cut-Rate OHIO 207 UNIVERSITY ST. CORNER SECOND AVE MUTT AND JEFF—THERE ARE TWO WAYS OF GETTING MONEY PROVIDING YOU GET IT on and the California universities. it Is openly admitted at Washington they will make a hard drive to put over the rule favoring shutting freshmen out of all athletic competition. “California won't let Washing- ton play freshmen against them, and Washington don’t want the mixed-pickle combination, fresh men against us up here and a team without freshmen against California,” remarked Bohle in explaining Washington present campaign against the poor freshie. t of feeling appeared te nm Bohler, Rademach unger and Dobie. ib Dietz pr er y frequent consultation at Spokane lam week. Bobler and Younger both dec ‘ed th were anxious to get together on Perms for a 1916 game betw university and Washington 8 and if some bug aboo does not between now and January 1 {t i» more than like. ly they wit! succeed PAYS TRIBUTE TO COACH DOBIE eorge Cole, coach at Ballard ah, and former tackle at Whit- man, has a high reg for Gil mour Dobie as a coach. He cred its him with being the most thoro teacher with whom he ever came In contact figured out a dozen Ss to such a fine point, every man is accounted t nd then drilied his men so thoroly on these few that I feel certain Dobie could mail a dia- gram of his plays and signals to the other fellow and then beat him That is about as high praise as Doble could draw who lunched together and were seen tn OcT PAGE 7, SATURDAY 1915, - ROHN SE Re (Copyright, 1918 by H.C Misher ‘Trade Mark Rew U. & Par Ofte EES! pomennncen om He ghg: tebthoumnoes or a ce = z - Tey ( Joy? MuTT Look! ‘ e\i) \ ane SPEAK, MAN, = cp beagle en thet | OH! FiNe! ) | YOUR VALoROUs ConDUCT THANKS, pe id aetath INK ' rue KAISER, TT SAYS! = f MURRY AND } 1] UNDER FIRE Hig IMPERIAL DoKe! caw! Ss ' ae GET To em | || MATESTY WeTRUCTS ME Ust Me see? SUSPENSE Hag BEEN WHY INI, YOO } “Ginseng Reger Kernen || we NEED | |VLTo GRANT Any FAVOR TLL TAKE A | | TERRIBLE! WHAT POOR timp ? | om ete Peek he Kaede rou May Demand BrTLe. oF DID You Ger? A gOTTLE F Wiakeg Drew agow any Heats ‘ Ms ; | Agaranct that ph nap ) aes OF INKS GILMOUR DOBIE AS HE LOOKS DURING A GAME Aloft in the balcon stand at Dugdale field of the grand Friday after). Broadway high Elmer noon, sat thi school f ire Coach bis adv | Henderson rs, Lea and Ed Turner, Mike Powers, coach of the midgets, and the track squad. nie lis of Lincoln nd Austin K. Alien jof Queen Anne After Franklin had defeated the heavy Ballard am, 9 to 0, the con sensus of opinion was that Res burg, because of a highly developed system of ‘orward passing, with his Franklin light weight will give Broadway Already Franklin has held Queen Anne to a scoreless tle Benson again was Frar running back punts on of 15 to 20 yards on every boot thand « of forward passes was r markable. Borkman and Chesbr @ tackle, shot the ball thr the waiting ends on three dif.) ferent set-ups, Franklin having fo men walting for the paws. Benson seemed to have no end of pass fo: jmations, and between 20 and were tried. Practically the whole system of offense was based on the pass BALLARD IMPROVES | Ballard showed a ment r Frank and Lincoln a battle for * star, age) Hi an a the air| to but a touchdown and Chesbro had made & beautiful drop kick from the 26- rd line, Cole's team at times b. Silent, tense, keenly alert Is Coach Dobie of the Washington sev- came unnecessarily rough in hand-|en-plied champions during a football game. Nothing escapes him. |Iing their lighter opponents. George| Whatever mistake a player makes, no matter how insignificant it may Cole probably reprimanded his pla -| appear to the casual spectator, is chronicled in Dobie’s brain, and the jers, for that sort of thing goes) miscreant “called” after the game. against his grain. Their neck-high| — kling was dangerous, too. Al yard penalty for roughing after |signal for a fair catch had been| lgiven gave Franklin four downs to! |make one yard, Benson carrying it) jover a hurdle—which escaped Ref-| eree Perkins’ eyes Johnson, Ballard center, played a t game. He isa fellow and| rasily the best man at his position! lin Seattle DELIHAS BIG BATTLES TOUGH FOE IN IN BIG NINE; « He’s Yale’s Pinch Kicker Guernsey BULL BROS. Deatists Just Printere «AIN 1043 1013 THIRD COLGATE TEAM FEAR GOPHER NEW YORK, Oct. 20.—Prospects| CHICAGO, Oct. 30.—Two of the that Yale will aste defeat again * in the Big Nine football : ‘ nee will be eliminated from loomed large today when she met| the’ tice for the championship. te 1 eis | the powerful Colgate football team Minnesota ts picked to spill Whenever Tale catnot plerce the | Coss*s Hetatorore aot exactly big (Thee ie aa ee ae jopponent’s line, Guernsey, one of| league company, has developed a), incnasll | Pee ‘il ucego the best kickers in the East, is|remarkable fighting machine this) {91 Jjuu ian Hee pee Mea : rn Li LJ will clash at Urbana, The visiting o le ot i try a drop or place) season, and has rolled up over 200! toam is t favorite in n con Ke! e peen remarks . H ly in the Harvard and Princeton| et ® stngle tally. The Army was this sour and her champlonshty gueneé Colgate’s chief victim Wisconsin, on the other hand, two -_ —-—— Followers of Yale are decidedly} weeks a beat Ohio State easily | glum, with the Princeton game only | after the Buch had held Ili TIBBOTT, TIGER, [fro weeks oft. Princeton, regard-|nole torn Sto3 the | A REAL FIND ° as the star eleven of the Kast The powerful Minnesota is |should have Httle more than prac expected to swamp iilinois. - |tiee work to beat Yale unl Coach Zuppke's machine has | Tibbott of Princeton, a soph, is| day and in the next two weeks little of the strength it dis sald to be the best backfield man| develops more steam than she has| played last year and hae had a |had thus far poor Season. Coach “Hurry | Harvard, too, faced a formidable Up" Yost of Michigan expects jopponent in Penn, State, tho her his squad to stage a comeback chances of holding down the vis this afternoon when it meets itors seemed better than the Yale| Syracuse in the first of the East ve. West contests of the year, Simultaneously at Lan sing, the Michigan Aggies will meet the Oregon Aggies. PLAN FRESHMAN | chances ‘OREGON AGGIES | FAR, FAR AWAY California students are looking | BAST LANSING, Mich., Oct. 20.—| forward to a game next fall between p = ————<= |The Oregon Aggies football squad'the freshmen teams of the U. of C. In the Kast this season on early |took the kinks out of their legs this! and U. of W. Sport writers in San season showing with the exception, /morning with a final limbering P| Francisco think the game uld be of course, of Eddie Mahan of Har. {practice for today’s game with thelan annual event and predict it would draw well KELLY HURT Michigan Aggies “Basketball” tactics the feature of Oregon's pla vard |'WHITE BEATEN are expected }to be BY MAT WELLS SPORT BOOMS AT | j 65. \xcwins, ocr. 2 Kelly, champion” hurdler MILWAUKEE, Oct, 20-—Chartie) WHITMAN AGAIN Finan Contaae Tec White of Chicago lost a poplar de which beat California Saturda WALLA WALLA, Oct. 20.- More) and Leo Livernash are out fgr the cision to Matt Wells, the English] oot ‘14 being taken in athleti erga cae th hy igy the lightweight, in a fast ten-round bout|inig year than ever in the history) trrcture was Just above. the. left hi last night, according to thelof the co Vincent Borleske,| .nkie, Doctors aay it will not per ;unanimous opinion of fans foday. |graduate manager of athletics, bas) vontly affect his hurdling stimulated interest till nearly the | Bhole col is exercising \ training table for Stanford's | 3 used mest of the time, Now five giort program at Palo Alto. | BALTIMORE, Oc8, 30.—"Johnny"|courts are in use nearly all the me. __ We volley bal | Poe, Jr., one-time Princeton football | Outdoor basketball and star, soldier, adventurer and club-jalso are being play = 7 man, {8 dead—the victim of a Ger-| MrisBorleske has charge of the FREE ADMISSION man bullet. Word from the London|swimming for women and the pool AT DREAMLAND war office showed he was “killed |i6 wiee ee coal a aCe TEVERLN in action” when the Black Watch — SN CELY ONE WELCOME |i netion to which he belonged,| Hollywood Waffles are} was almost wiped out in France. now in season Pike St.—Adv, GAME IN 1916} s0 ft Can weire HOMe FOR MOoNeN | WASHINGTON CHAMPIONS ARE PICKED TO DEFEAT WHITMAN eshman Rule Sure to RESEBURG'S ome Upin Conference; PLAYS TURN .of W.Fosters the Idea, IN VICTORY CONFERENCE TEAMS GET INTO ACTION | PORTLAND, Ore, Oct. 30 | Weather conditions Indicated that the thr rtant football game: in the t today will paratively dry flelds Aggies Michi East Lansing today State college will of Idaho at Idaho, the University of will meet Willamette Unt | versity at Salem and Whitman Col |lege will clash with the University of Washington at Seattle. Due to the intense rivalry tween the teams the W. 8. C..Idaho game in attracting the most atten |tlon. Since the schools established football relations, each has won eight times and there has been one tie Kame The University of Washington is expected to win from Whitman, |the only question apparentiy being the size of the score, | The University of Oregon usually be | played on con | The | Aguie Oregon pla gan Washington [play the University | Moscow | Oregon at be |finds Willamette easy prey, but two years ago the Methodists sprung a surprise by winning Coach Bezdek is not taking any chances this year and has trained his men carefully for the contest Complete Report of Market Today id Wholesale Dealers fo | Vegetables and Fruit ‘orrected dally by J. W. Godwin & Co.) Alaska rutabagas, mack 09 B yy 1 @ 100 wan os abbage rene ole a). lemons, per crate... 260 @ 4.00 Calitorn natoes, luge 1.00 Cataloupes, Yakima 125 @ 150 Cod cranberries, pbr 9.00 Cape Cod cranberries, box 228 Washington a6 Washington, box Tokay grapes 2 Malaga grapes 1.25 ey * 3.50 e air on kieberries o5% Local head lettuce, 4 dos. in crate 150 @ 20 | Valencia oranges > @ 5.50 Navel oranges 00 @ 5.60 Parsley, dox 20 Pineapples oT Pears 0 @ 176 Peppers, bell, 1b. 06 Peppers, bell, lug box 1.00 Chill peppers, bell, lug box 1.60 Radishes 15 Pum fs, Ib 1 1 = 18 x so @ 60 ls meiona, PY 1% ly preserving. toma | toes, box ty Yakima turaips, yellow., 1.36 Turnips, sack et 1.60 Apples Jonaths Winter Banana ew apples, king 76 Grimes’ Golden 1.60 Local King Apples 1.00 o 28 oy om 12.00 @13 1800 0. akin 18.00 @20 for Emi A Pork 4 Telgian har Rrotlers 16 -@ Hens, 4 lbs, and over “wo Hens be Her and under 1 over 8 6 c Prices to Retailer for | Sell iter, Kgge and Cheese | | ee | Butter Natitg = Wanrhington reamery, brick a3 Native Washington cream@ry, solid pack 32 Cheese Domeatic wheel 23 Limburger is Oregon triplets 16% Wisconsin (wing 11 Wiscor un Washing is Young Am 8 [erect an April storage exes as BY BUD FISHER I¢@s never too late in the week to buy Cheasty at $2.50 to $20.00 Values Tell STRAIGHT STUFF By the Sporting Editor Washington probably will win by two touchdowns from Whitman Saturday, and Queen Anne and Lincoln stack up about even. These two games, the intercollegiate struggle at Denny field and |the Important high school game at Dugdale park, are the football menu | for Seattle. Dobie h: which, despite its Jack of speed, probably will show ttoo strong a defense for Borleske’s green eleven. | “Dobie always has had a wonderful defen: Borleske said Satur- | day, “and that's the reason he can’t be defeated. A dozen plays are all | he needs—well, half that many—because he has them so well werked out there is little chance of stopping them. With big, powerful fell £% | In the backfield, tackles and ends simply can’t stand up under those awful emashes. And then he has his team so well coached on defen | sive, they can’t be beat.” | | Tom Wand, former varsity quar-|lege since a winner in football has terback when Bud Young and Coyle| been found. The entire student | Were not working, and now assist-| body planned to attend the game at jant ch at Lincoln high school|Moscow, Idaho, Saturday, the eo- | where Ernie Wells, another ex-vars-|ede having arranged to walk the jity player, reigns, has a high opinion |nine mil eparating Moscow and Jof Whitman colleg Pullman. Transportation facilities |.,, Those fellows certainly scrap,” | must be primitive east of the moun- | Wand rema rked, “and they are the|tains, or the girls want to prove j fastest team in the conference ev-\ themselves grateful for a football jery year. don't know how they/team that ix worthy of the name. can be so consistent over there eee | with st J h such speedy teams | Over-confidence has begun to Wand {s one of those who, lereep out at W. S.C. Dobie has a jcause he is on the inside at Wash- much harder time framing a def q against this bugbear than neni anything the other fellows sl a him, and it becomes harder every season. - |ington, does not hesitate to call any one who remarks that Dobie is |merely spreading gloom when he| | states his team {is the slowest ever. | | “I never saw a team so h ! [the hoof.” The U. of C. comes forth with al proposal, informal as yet, that the |freshman teams of California and | Washington meet in annual battle starting next fall There will be no team, coached under eye, until freshmen are perma- nently barred from intercol- legiate competition by all the teams on Younger’s schedule. | Doble has nothing to do with BROWN & HULEN ’ the class teams at the state || Second and Spring Third Flooé university, which probably ac- | counts for the fact they are in- itably walloped. When the rule is adopted all along the Coast, Dobie may have a freshman team that is hat |] That Seattle in the world? billiard parlor | Come in and see. ALIST worthy of the name, but not un- DISEASES | der present conditions. or M AND Broadway high school beat the ‘WoRee® rings, 13 to 6, in an abbreviat lye w jed game at Lincoln park a few days) ||| tee to cure or no fee charged. || 0 anc quite appare: rty * I have made @ | jago and it was quite apparent the| |) Thirty » sting whan aleee freshmen had no coaching what- lever. Dobie will have gothing to do Kidney and with a team unless he is boss, and ae ee jhe has the right idea Il “to nee end Welnen “ | 9 @ mine free. 606 or 914 | Down in San Francisco Saturday nt Sisomaets, eee the St. Mary's college football team! | f% Ty ny ‘ottice, corner Third {s battling the University of Calli and Pike, Entrance 4 Third fornia with the hope of a victory ave St. Mary's second team a week or so ago defeated the California) “We guarantee the superiority oF jserubs, 7 to and, to stem the the Lundberg Truss, and give free | tide, half a dozen varsity men were | trial to prove it + jthrown in by Jimmy Shaeffer, in-| jcluding Sharp, Montgomery, Mom-| | sen, Lane, Graf, Bender, Liversedge, | Neuhaus, Duddleson, The fact that | |St. Mary's withstood the rush of| |California'’s scrubs bolstered up by} |the varsity men indicates they have] ja strong bunch. A. LUNDBERG CO, eee Trusses, Deformity appl ana | Artificial Lim Karl Staatz, a Tacoma boy 07 THIRD av who played on the U, of W. basketball team in 1912, is t || ARNOLD'S CATARR' REMEDY star end on Hurry Up Yost A FEW USE! or eleven this season, Staatz has WW. H. Fisher, Mur. Redelsheim- 1. lard, Mrs. Thomas Singer of Seattle. Business men and women need not suffer with catarrh. A 2c stamp will bring a a brother, Stanley, at Washing- ton now, but Stan does not turn out for football, tho he has the physical qualifications for a great end. Karl Staatz was the best forward in the conference in his freshman year and made | good at Michigan in his second | imple. ABSOLUTELY FREE It costs you nothing to season, He played against Har- | ooo nett vard last year. advice. eee iT WI TELL Spirit runs high at the state col, all Diss ORDERS PECU~ Frosh Kastern ] Country Hay and Gra | (Prices paid producer) o 3 oe “9ld" for Alfalfa, No. 1 blooa disorders. Barley j Come to me for relable Wasser- | Bastern Washington oate 5.00 man Blood Teast. Puget #0 16.00 r Puget oc 5.00 Straw 6.50 Timothy . 1100 Qa. m. to 8 pom. Sun- Wheat 32.00 days, 10 a. m. te —*\f CHAMPION DISTANCE SW:iMMER Prof. H. S. Horan Will Demonstrate His Aquatic Skill SUNDAY, OCT. 31, AT 3 P. M. BOAT LEAVES PIER 4, FOOT OF SPRING STREET ADMISSION—Adults 250, Children 15¢ 1330 First Also at Ave., Wharf, Tickets—Raymer's Book Store, and Gem Egg Market, 82 Pine St