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Mead Paw, PoRTHe Love FOF MIKE, MUTT, EY ONY fj To Go A f STow NeR@ AND |S SLeeP FoR THE | NiGNT. TM ALLTIN® 4 t From several sources came the > tip that the University of Calffor > nia had offered Coach Gilmour Doble of the U. of W. champions $5,000 a year salary to handle Call fornia’s football m. Equally “authentic” reports were to the effect that William H. Dietz, the Indian who has attained won- derful success in his first year with the Washington State Col- lege eleven would be offered the position Not five minutes later a staunch supporter informed us that a move. ment was being started locally to place the name of Wee Coyle, for mer varsity quarterback and the keenest football player ever turn- ed out at the state university, be fore Graduate Manager Ralph Stroud and his advisers. Coyle {ts coach at Gonzaga university, in Spokane “There is absolutely nothing to it,” laughed Stroud {a a sleepy voice this morning over the tele- phone wire. “This thing came cut clear California sky. We paven't given the thing any thought at all. We have a year to make a selection. is contracted here year.” Dietz no doubt will put tn an ap- plication for the jod left vacant by Jim Schaeffer this week. Dietz was wise enough to sign for only one year at Pullman. He ts free after this season and the boys at W. S. C. will have to raise the ante if they expect to retain his valuable services. Dobie said he had not been ap- He treated the rumor lightly. The folks up here are deter. mined to elect a coach for Cail- MONTPIER GETS for SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 13.--Port- © land's only entry in the Panama- | Pacific exposition boxing tourna- ment to reach the finale—Vincent Montpler—fared badly in the 135- pound class, losing a decision to Johnny Stanton of the Olympic club. boys went at it rough and St. Paul Stove Repair & Plambiag Ce. ut in and connected. Os PIKE *T. Mata 875 “In at a five ’ ne” JACOBS ‘0 SHOP Second Floor P.-1. Bids. BULL BROS. Just Printere *o13 THIRD @AIN 1042 ‘| Are appropriate at all | |) | times. We have made a careful selection of flaw- less stones, perfectly cut. These ems can be mounted % settings man- ufactured by us to your order. Diamonds have perma- nent value and are be- : coming much more valu- able every year. We have them in all sizes, but the smaller stones are just as precious propor- tionately as the larger ones. Diamond Merchants 821 Second Ave. DONT WEAKeN! WEVE HNE a HEART! ff) THE VILLAGE OF “SCOVIS! mM TRED, Lets WHERE WE CAN RENT h\ SeattleFolks AreBound to Elect New Coachfor WILL NOT California Right Away Any way, Dobie | another | AWFUL LICKING| euves Jer te——Yes, One Can't Be Too Careful in W. & (~ wooK Gor (0 MIL@S MoRE AND WE'LL BE IN oh Room IN THE * Scovls POLL ir T wa fornia before Stroud can take his Bears back to Berkele: Stroud will han: days we'll have a nice coach for him, little packed and ready for delivery. Or failing in that, we'll mail one to him parce! post. BIG ICE RINK NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC Seattle put on its ice skates last night. The huge new art! ficial rink, which covers half a equare block, was thrown open to the public with nearly 3,000 In attendance, half of whom took to the Ice. |] A program of fancy skating, |] provided by Mise Kinkereithe of ot Mul- ames and Carl Portiand, Mise Nicholson Minneapolis, Manager doon of the hockey tea Bourke of Montrea’ Walterberg of Russia, featured the opening. were not on While the experts eo ice Seattie folk ave long been idle The Arena will be open every day from 10 a. m. to 10:30 p. m., with the exception of Sundays. ‘STATE COLLEGE HOPES TO ROLL UP HIGH SCORE WALLA WALLA, Nov, 13.— Will the W. 8. C. be able to ex- ceed the University of Wash. Ington’s score of 27 to 0 against Whitman college here this aft- ernoon? This was the ques tion uppermost in the minds of football fans. Admirers of W. S. C. are claim ing for it the championship of the Coast, and if Whitman is more de. cisively defeated by W. 8. C. than |by Washington, they will have some grounds for the contention, it is claimed. Because of the determination of Coach Dietz's crew to roll up a |large score, and the determination jot the Missionaries to hold it as }low as possible, Interest In the |game was intense. Bes 1% @ 100 Banan os ¢ é + 01 @ 01% Cal. lemons, per crate... 269 @ 400 | Cal. erapetrutt : 669 1.28 9.00 a6 se 100 @ a ida grapefruit 650 imbers, hothouse 6 @ 7 1% @ eppers, bell, lug box... 190 Chill peppers. vell, lug box 160 Hadishes 16 ° ° ° « @ e as 01% olK 12.00 @1200 od “hi 2 ° for Eess, | Pork | Seigian hares . on | Brotlere 16 @ 1 Ducks, fat u FOLDING BED! Dowr TNAT TURF, You GREAT DOWN | NT To CRawt INT? THE HAY es { MARKET REPORT | AT THAT SWELL FLOPPING ON THI | GRIZZLIES BOW DOWN Seattic wae surprised to learn that the plucky University of California players, having for | gotten the 72 to 0 defeat at | Berkeley a week ago, do not | expect to get licked again to day on Denny field, dow't expect to get nd that goes,” returned | Capt. Canfield, in answer to a reuest to estimate the probable score. “We learned a lot from Washington a week ago, and we don't intend to take the de | feat handed to us a few days ago,” explained the intrepid leader of the Golden Griz The indomitable spirit the Southerners evince is the thing | that makes the renewal of foot | ball retations with the Califor- | nians so. popular he The big intversity teams will line | up the same an a week ago. New |house has been substituted at left end for Hazeltine on the California team. Duddleson, injured a week | ago, may not be able to play. Sharp, | Canfield, Brooks and Montgomery | will compose California's backfield while Young, Noble, Shiel and Miller will do the U. of W. battering Dobte expects to win by a “good | score,” but thinks the total will be |less than {t was last Saturday. My men are too confident that they can win easily to be as efficient as last Saturday, and California not only learned a world of football tn the defeat, but are certain w fight to the last trench. | | Line-Up | __ California. Washington, Newhouse Le . Hunt (¢) | Lockhart . 144 Leader | Saunders ©. Wirt Smith . ¢ Lore Russell Tr. . Seagrave Render rt . Morrison Gibbs . re . Murphy Sharp .... Cie yes Young Canfield (¢ rh . Noble Montgomery ...1. h . Miller Brooks fb Shiel RUGBY TILT SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. With the rugby champtonahip 13.— ot art mes— WELL, What Mrs. Vanderbeck, STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 13, 1915. THE (DEA, ARE You OFF Youre NUT? DOING “THERE ! PAGE 7 (Copyright, 1918, by My 6. Fisher, WHAT'S ARE You MOTHERS ARECHAMPIONSIN THREE BRANCHES OF OUTDOOR SPORTS Mrs. Almert, trapshooting champion, Mrs. Bundy, tennis champion, and golf champion, alifornia at stake Santa Clara will 1 what {s predicted w classiest rugby contests staged in| California for some time. Both ag-| gregations have gone thru the sea Stanford and here today tn be one of the | son without defeat, and every man 1s in prime condition | | Postponing the Oregon victory over U. $C. from Saturday to Mon-| day took all the edge off the affair. | Bezdek could not have gained any great Satisfaction over the trip | * and over be | | ° | 4 ander | nen, over 2 Sprir Ve. Old roosters, live 4 block howe | Pork. Inraer a aisktee | Squads, good sine, dow .. 4 | Veal, 76 to 120-10 : > : u Warhington ery, solid pack Cheese Fase Country Hay and Grain (Prices paid producer) 14.86 2400 25.00 16.00 26.00 660 17.00 22.00 D0 YOU KNOW ot Seattle iilard parlor Come in and see. has in the the finest world? BROWN & HULEN POWERS’ BOYS 8 GRAB MIDGET TITLE AGAIN The hardest game of the season was the spectators character tized the 9-to-0 victory of the Broad midgets over Queen Anne for the Seattle title at Lincoln park Friday afternoon, Previous | to this time neither team had been | defeated, while both had eliminat- | od their opponents by large scores. | The game had to be stopped time after time in order to clear the field of spectators A touchdown from goal and a safety accounted for Broadway's points. The touchdown was made | in the first few minutes of play, | when Mason of Queen Anne at tempted a punt from his 25-yard | line, The kick was blocked by Ed| Dean and started to roll towards | the Queen Anne goal line way way Just as | it crossed the line, Eyman of Broad-| way fell on it for the only touch-| down of the game. Vaughn kicked goal. From then on {it was a bat tle royal, first one team and then | the other having the advantage. »+| The Ines of both teams held within the shadow of their goal posts.” There were no shadows. | Queen Anne showed a surprising defense. Broadway held several times with the ball on thelr 12-yard | line. Trick plays were numerous, | both squads making long gains. | Queen Anne tried ‘more forward passes, most of these being inter cepted by members of the Broad way squad, The last quarter de veloped a punting duel between Ma. | son of Queen Anne and Feek and | Vaughn of Broadway | played good | Mason and Ward ball in the backfield for Queen | Anne, while Barker used his head | to good advanta On the line, | Lower and Dugley broke up many Rich plays. For Broadway, Feek, ards, Wyman, Vaughn and Kyle were the stars. These five seem to be among the best midget play ers in the city | FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANCING BYE! VENINO EVERY ONE WELOOME Second and Spring Third Floor YOUNG ROUNDS INTO FORM Bud Young Bud Young, varsity quarter- back, after a slow start, Is gradually rounding into the form he displayed In 1912, when Coach Dobie stamped him a bet- ter man than Wee Coyle. Young Is doing all the punting for Washington this season and do- Ing it well. Bud had a lot to do with Washington's 72 to 0 vic- tory over California. Whenever any fancy kicking is demanded Young has been instructed to call on himself, He came from Lincoin high, This picture reveals Bud as a common ordinary citizen with a nice pompadour. FRAT SERIOUS The annual basketball series be. tweon fraternities at the U, of W. will begin this week be be from the champlonship this sea son, The Greeks are playing for a cup hung up by the inter-fraternity council, The Phi won last season, Teams must |American aten twice to be eliminated | man Blood Delta Thetas| ‘Trade Mark Teg, U. & Pat. Off) f WANT To fee iF THeRG'S A GPX UNDER. bED THE BY BROWN HOLMES H This Is the year of mothers as athletic champions. In three branches of sports mothers who divide their time between play, household duties and the raising of children have triumphed over single women. Mrs. Harold Almert of Chi- | cago, mother of two, is national | woman champion trapshooter. Mre. W. F. Vanderbeck of } Philadelphia, Pa. mother of | two, is national woman golf | | champion. Mrs. Thomas Bundy of San Francisco, mother of one, is woman tennis champion of the Pacific coast, and picked to be national champion when she meets Miss Mollie Bjurstedt, Norwegian, who won the title while Mrs. Bundy was in tem- porary retirement. EAST SIDE AFTER NEW PRESIDENT The Spokane newspapermen take some mean, uncalled for thrusts at President Bob Blew-* | ett of the Northwestern league. They admit they are determin. | ed to “get” him. Blewett in- curred the enmity of the East. | ern Washington town by doing the bidding of the majority on Schedule matters. He decided against Bob Wicker in two or three cases in which Wicker | was all to the wrong. The fel. | lows over there are the fact that Seattle Is the cen- ter of the league and their | walls of anguish are distress- Ing. Newt Colver, the Figuring | Fiend, Is the most notoriously | radical. He is foaming at the mouth because Bob Brown sug- | gested Blewett as a member of | the national board of arbitra. | tion, Colver * Brown promised to support Frank J. | Dorsey of Spokane for presi dent. if Dug lets the Spokane clan get away with this raw deal on Blewett we are “off” him. PLAY IN SNOW Pullman football players prac- | tleed in three inches of snow for| three nights this week. That must| have been tough on Coach Dietz’s | patent leather es, PERMANENT AND RELIABLE. 10 Years tn Senttie, I have no substitutes or assistants. | soe and treat you per sonally, It costs you noth to s and a Heart, Varicose Veins, — | Blood and Skin disorders, ete Venarsen, the new and_ rellable emedy for blood Aisorders, Come to for reliable Wasser: | Union and Office hour Sundays, 10 a. m. to 8 p to 12 BY BUD FISHER Footbal! captains do not seem to be having much of a big sea- son. There is Wilson of Yale, who could not get along with the old order of things. Mc- Auliffe of Dartmouth and Har ris of Pennsylvania are yet to be classed as real regulars, and Weyand of West Point was benched the other day for not showing enough life in prac tice. see Dick King, who scored the touch down against Princeton, has work-| ed hard and long for the chance to| become one of Harvard's foot heroes, This is his senior year. He has been out every season for a po-} sition on the baseball, crew or foot ball team, and ft was his hard work| and steady plugging that finally) earned him a chance. He made good, eee This note from Pullman is of | exceptional interest, in view of the fact that Dietz is football (‘Lone Star’) Dietz will deliver a lec- | ture to the Architectural club of | the college tomorrow, using the topic, ‘Music and Art as Relat- ed to Architecture.’ The coach is an experienced lecturer and artist, and is In charge of sev es in fine arts at the | He has delivered many res on Indian art in Amer- This from a Frisco paper would indicate Jimmy Schaeffer is in bad in the South, because his men were} defeated, 72 to 0, by Washington } “When the team included such| gridiron stars as Percy Hall, War-; ren Smith, ‘Wreck’ Womble, Fred! Greisberg, Charley Pringle, Fred Athearn, Jim Whipple, Pete Kaars-| berg and others whose names will live as long as Senator Phelan’s| prize statue stands on the Berkeley | campus, the students sent for Garry) Cochrane to coach the team, and} Cochrane made a, football machine out of that material that was as/ good as any in the country. They| played the Carlisle Indians to a} standstill, and the Indians were! some Indians in those days “McClung, Heffelfinger, Butter-| worth, Cochrane, Kelly, Knibbs these are the kind of men that Cali fornia engaged when it had a team Now, when it has a lot of fine raw material that merely needs the| proper drilling to mold it into one of the kind of teams that gladdened the hearts of the Blue and Gold stu dents in the nineties and the early years of this century, it puts a man’s job on a boy's shoulders, As a Player and coach of the American game of football, Jimmy Schaeffer never passed beyond the freshmar period . American sporting critics ad- LINCOLN WINS; | ’ LACKS FIGHT) Lincoln had a hard time defeating West Seattle, 20 to 0, at Dugdale field Friday afternoon, lacking the scrap that characterized the team in its big games, Lincoln's line- men were pushed back for yardage several times, and failed to open holes. | West Seattle played its best game | of the season, | x " | | CALL OFF TRIP PULLMAN, Nov. 13.—The Dart | mouth university eleven will not | make a trip to the Northwest in December, as was planned. The| faculty has rujed against the pro-! posal. j arrives from Australia Cheasty’s Overcoat Is King $15 to $50 And all the In-between Prices “Values Tell’’ mit that the middleweight championship of the world be- longs to Les Darcy, the Austra- lian. Darcy beat Jeff Smith on a foul, knocked out Eddie Me- Goorty, beat Billy Murray, and now he has won on points from Jimmy Clabby. Mike Gibbons does not figure, because he nev- er fought Clabby to a decision over the long route, altho he outpointed the red-haired boxer in a ten-round, no-decision tea. According to Tommy Burns, he has two championship matches in ight for New Orleans that are cer- tain to be staged. The first will take place in January, between Joe Mandot and Freddie Welsh, and in March Jess Willard and another heavyweight will battle for the world’s championship in this divise A scientist has declared that bugs have souls. This is a big boost for the baseball fan, . A team with a good defense, a strong pair of ends and a kicker ma ynot always win, but it will mighty seldom lose. ary If Young Ahearn is bent on claim- ing the middleweight championship, he'd better do it before Les Darcy Judging from the brand of base- ball the Athletics put up this year, it seems most unfair to call any boy who merely got a try-out with them a professional. en if he'd made |good with them, it would scarcely have injured his amateur standing. _ Success New England’s de- velopment was made possible by the thrift of her people. The same habits of -sav- ing and careful use of savings are equal- ly necessary for the proper development of this newer part of the country. The large total of savings deposits in the Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank and _ other banks here is a good indication of Seat- tle’s prosperity, just as the amount to your credit measures your personal suc- cess. DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS | BANK ORCOND ANU CHERRY 207 University st. 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