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STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 27, 1915, PAGE 7, |MUTT AND JEFF—{T WAS TOO LATE TO TELL IT TWICE, ANYWAY —— GENERAL, THE ENEMY HAS TAKE Mice 29 AND ARE Now TRAINING THEIR, HEAVY GUNS ON THIS PosiT ION, THEY ARE ABOUT TO OPEN Fire AND LOCATE OUR —, (cee! ry iy TERRIBCG ' Butie tas Horse sOLDS OUT T MAY BE ARLE Lo SANE vy VET. “Go Ovd HORSE ./T MEANS § OF LIVES Range * UNiess WE SHIPT OUR LING AT ONCE OUR TROOPS WILL pe wirep OvT! we Haven T A MINUTE TO Spare. wel. 8 CUTOFF FROM —— a WHAT - DID You) SAX ? 'FINEGOLD BOOSTED FOR ALL-STAR TEAM anford Seeks to Patch Up Athletic Relations in South TANFORD realized that it was getting the short end of the soft athletic pickings in California and after attempting to substitute Santa Clara as their op ponent in the big rugby game of the year the Palo Altoites have begun to sue for peace with California. BOHLER "AGAINST NEW RULE SPOKANE, Nov “Washing- |ton State college will cast her vote lat Portland for whatever she thinks for the beat interests of the North | has already The president of the Stanford student body in a letter |west conference,” said J. F. Bohler, to the student leader at California asks that the question |faculty director of athletics at W. df allowing freshmen to play on varsity teams be placed be 8. C., while here yesterday, fore an unbiased arbitration board and the two colleges agree "We will not, however, commit to abide by the decision of the arbitrators This action on Stanford's part may be the forerunner of a discontinuation of Rugby in favor of American football at Palo Alto. California has taken a firm stand on the} freshmen eligibility rule and it was backed up by Wash-) ington last week, and unless Stanford agrees to abide by the| decision of the two larger colleges the two southern teams/ will not meet in athletic competition again. Stanford’s action was prompted by the demands of the California public for the return of the annual big game be- een the two southern institutior:s. ourselves at this time to any policy| that would appear now to be tn jurious to the smaller tnatitutions! of the Northwem. Whitman and Idaho, | am very certain, could not jcontinue to bold thelr present high [standing in the conference freshmen barred. 1 doubt if Ore |gon university could stand the loss of her freshmen. She has only 800) or 900 students, and I understand! |that over half are women. } }ington State is not balking for per sonal reasons, of that you may be very sure. We will have only three men of this year's squad, and have in the neighborhood of 20 who have been out every night all year | ! with | s + + ee | With Dobie gone and with two coach and new football methods, be) Big games already scheduled and able to uphold the standard set by @he possibility of a third with Stan- the peerleas Scot which has placed ford, Washington faces 4 crucial the Seattle university on the level| problem in its gridiron history.| with any in the country? nee va wel as pe glo i dor Wil Westington, under « new Sunt | our next year’s team does not need , Certain fanatic athletic critics) |freshmen to Insure it being as good can now put basketball in class | or better than this year. If, how. with football and boxing as “brutal”| ever, it should be shown to be for! sports. A l4-yearold youth was lthe larger interests of the thrown to the floor In a game at ference Washington State is for it || Newark, Ohio, and died from an Finegold My personal opinion is that an injury to his spine. . allcoast conference would be a ATW i oe * Abe Fine the former jgood thing, but there are certain Members of three big college! Broadway high school player, [obstacles that must be overcome <== football teams spent Friday night) Who played end thie season un- together in Seattle. Captain Ray| der “Wee” Coyle at Gonzaga, le (different than {!n California and we Hunt of the Washington team m being boosted for an All-North- |are gotng to have trouble agreoing Breakfast Captain Rose and Huros of Syra-| west end position by Spokane jon dates. Then, I am quite certain, cuse, at the tratn and later the vist-| | sport critics. When Washing |from recent correspondence I have tors were introduced to Walt Shiel| ton played Gonzaga, Finegold [had with Stanford, that this Call and Bud Young from Washington,| was pitted against Mike Hunt, |fornta institution will never vote to Lunch and who had two Colorado players in| Washington's all-star end, and exclude freshmen. I doubt if the! tow, showing them the town. Healy,| the dopesters in the Inland city |University of Oregon will. Whit er the big left tackle, and Chapmai think the Seattle boy had the [man and Idaho certainly will not.” the left half, were the Colorado men. in the party. | The visitors were taken to the best of the argument. Whether Finegold Northwest caliber or Cooked is of Alt Quality and Ho: Food § not, the erved. ZUPPKE WILL BE theatre by the Washington men.| fact that he Is one of the best | es Cana The Colorado team also left last| little football players ever | MINUS STAR MEN night for Frisco, where they will] turned out of a Seattle high | pes ee ar Breakfast see the fair before their return) school Is certain. Finegold be- URBANA, Ill, Nov, 27.—Rob/ Specials home. gan his football career as a |Zuppke's third year of coaching at . inn Midget at Broadway, and the /Ilitnols ended with a tie with Min Waffles, with Coffee ....10¢ W. S. C. is the first of the North-| next year made the first team, |nesota for the Big Nine title. The Hot Cakes, with Coffee .10¢ west colleges to adopt the player| the first ex-Midget to wear a |iittie coach, when he maps out his numbering system. In the Gonza-| “B.” He played only one year |1916 campaign, mast reckon with-| Ka game at Spokane Thanksgiving) and left school, entering Gon- [out the services of the twin whirl-| day Coach Dietz had numbers on| 2aga@ last fall. winds, Potsy Clark and Harold the backs of his players. It 1s al ” - on |Pogue, whose tame will endure long. asd RK matter of interest that Dietz at econdary defense and only five|!" [lini annals, as well as “Cap’| gles 5-year tended Carlisle when the number-|men on osha line to Foe a plare Sauler, the veteran end; Capt. Jack | ing system was first used in 1914,/On an open formation Cushman Watson, center; Breneman, right) 1421-23 4th Ave. when Dartmouth and Carlisle {n-|dropped back to a defensive back, ©’, and Anderson, sub half back Adjoining Joshua Green Bldg. augurated the innovation that has| position and Hunt also dropped spread to all parts of the country but the Northwest. back about five yards. Dobte's m learned their lesson well in the Call ON FOURTH 3 NEAR PIKE, NATIVE SON LOSES fa Bd fornia game and only one pass was eran Everett May, assistant coach at|successfully completed. That pass) gan FRANCISCO. Nov. 27.—Bob the Oregon Agricultural College, is|was on a wide throw to th end Summerville, southern California of the opinion that Washington |stationed near the side lines, and jeavyweight, who boasted of quite a could defeat Washington State Col-|only resulte a two-yard gain reputation, today Is minus a large lege were the two undefeated col-| eee \portion of his reputation as the re AT DREAMLAND legen of the Northwest to settle) When the university board of /POl cr hin clash with Willle Mechan DANCING BVESY BYENING their differences control decided {n favor of the EVERY ONE WELCOME jhere. Meehan knocked him out in “Washington State has @ won-|freshmen rule a number of people|+is second round derful offense,” said May, “and has|thought that Washington would|” wel int ae —_———— |been winning her games on that/stand alone in the Northwest. With Jacconnt. I don’t think much of|Oregon Agricultural college | ONE MORE | e |Meve that Washington State would |from inter fate competition, tt ‘se 99 4 P | t jnever be able to hold Dobie’s team, |jooks now if there is a strong pos-| PAY-ROLL us Fr n Ore |: they began plowing down the | nibitity that the rule may be passed = " THIRD AiN 1 | field.” : at the conference meeting next IN SEAT TLE a= ihe : 48 | "Thanks, Everett, Washington ap-|griday and Saturday | preciates the compliment Aa at mand now, W. S§ C.} alee “ee fs on the with Oregon, Whit-| Factory of the Egis Company Malcolm Gavin, ex-Wisconsin full-| man and » unannounced, but! Turns Out Product to Be back, who retired from college ath-|{ndications pointing toward being Used in Place of Eggs letics rather than face charges that) *sainst the rule, | | jad u er ball, ha | 1 > ts r >! 6 Sais te a content with he Ray Hunt, Washington captain, | ot eay in ae Seabitae uuiaine » Cubs fo ext #eAKO! Re. wan introduced to Coach O'Neill, of i st Ae % 7 apatite That Seattle has the finest ‘ ; 1 . Are - “ yer Svracuse, by Aseistant Coach Wm. has ne w actually started operation billiard parior in the world? sides being a & om star, | Horr at the depot, Friday night. |®nd Seattle has added one more to f Come In and see. bloag a aydier De eitine to take Mr. Hunt igha over 200 and|its long list ot factory hand” oon: ame beng rathaeicna’ basebad as a voca-|Dinys end at Washington,” was a of Ticitend chicas rs BROWN & HULEN tion Horr’s introduction to his head). ving; pumpkin ples, puddings, Washington prosented a peculiar) SON cakes, waffles, muffins, are made Are all your Washington men 7 Second and Spring Third Floor] defense for Colorado's forward ee men | with Egig, and no eggs aro used, passes by having #1X men BACK ae eee ne ot en eee ten {and it is claimed that this ts an conse — — ier eer oo rentor. | advance in domestic sclence, that Egis is a natural, wholesome food, Incidentally, that ttle story : cinieiadeeae a, ts shows about how much the Wash.|#lways sweet. It Is also claimed a “4 " : i {that Egis is a staple, as staple a ington team's weight wan Shaved) ae hen the tenm average was Riven {food as flour and meat, and that it| Sut In the announcements Hunts| Will always be used by the thritty| tc. Special Attract out, In the ouncements Hunt's! cusewife in place of eggs, being, SPECTATORS 106. ene Pi hh Ah fe fg ae fa on the present market, about one $00) »s. Washington must have had|*!xth the cost N TO BE ze : a ors rgt te Baets z ath 2 Md | The Keis Company has the back INTRODUCED xed yhiny jupitimaamad 16 lone, In| i of some of Seattle's big men jthe land lon {ts board of directors being Aig! myn Gd #90 OP ty nee apere 2 pulé mn te = ly hos, W Kolderup, president wt Spectacular Game in the World | ere | N of the Guardian Savings Bank Tickets o le Monday, 9 A. M | og o ih WwW W. P. Lockwood, general agent of t At ARENA OF On, Witth and Un realty. the S00’ Line; W Eyres, presi dent of the Kyre IADS FOR RESULTS drayage compaules, con- eligibility FRANK GIBB SICK Frank Gibb, sporting editor of The Star, seriously ill with pneumo- nia at the Lakeside hoe pital, Gibb left his desk Thursday and Friday morn- ing was re moved to the hospital in a serious condi. tion. Two doc. tors and a Frank Gibb specialist have been in attendance. The doctors have Issued or- ders that no one shall see the Pp t until his condition better, He passed a bad night Friday. At the hospital Saturday It wae stated his con. dition is critle Hundreds of Gibb’s friends in Seattle and in the North west are pulling for him to re cover. W. S. C. LOSES BUT THREE PLAYERS WASHINGTON STATE LEGE, Nov. 327-—W. 8. C. three men from the 1915 varsity football squad, who will be unable to play next season. Carl Dietz, fullback; Captain Ace Clark and Applequist, tackles, have worn the pyright, 1615, rade Mark i Corveuny at (ere FOYSTON TS NAMED N. HLA WESTERN FOOTBALL TEAMS PRAISED BY SYRACUSE COACHES AND PLAYERS CAPTAIN Frank Foyston, the speedy Metro. Pecially Montana football, w aad ves mau bie Prot) 4 . v2 mo! oO come. ne last for E |politan forward man, has been) Pald the highest compliment bY | games will be played within two Jelected captain of the local hockey | Coaches mers and id rea |e besides traveling 4,000' a _ captain and the members of the/| miles. + septette for this year. Foyston) 5, .cuse football team who were Play 13 Games one of the ‘Toronto stars/in Seattle for a few hours Friday| On successive Saturdays, Syra- brought here by the Western hock-| night on Jey magnates in their raid on the| Where they play the Oregon Aggies “Foyston is one of the braintest/them or who they have played, but players in the game and his elec-|I want to see the team tha‘ tion should meet the approval of, every hockey fan,” said Manager! yontang morning.| could beat them is the equal of|dental College on December 4. He i# a clever man with the stick/@2y in the country. at " thinkers! lin the game and will be able to|ends, a big line and a@ fast back-| capably look after the interest of] field and the | Pete Muldoon Saturday and one of the quickest the Seattle team on the ice. overlooking any bets in corralling|Cuse m COL-| Sreriooking pon bets in coralling| S@st team tn the East, but that Mon-| Jones a team that will make the others|'#na team was so heavy that we Savage,|!oked like pigmies beside them.” | step for the championship. the Portland magnate, up three from Winnipeg the nets this year in place of Mit has signed } of the fastest amateurs|#!bi for their close rub, Murray will guard purple and gray for four years and) cer, who has enlisted with a Cre for are ineligible of varsity competition more years NEW HAV . Nov. rules of Harvard, Yale and Princeton will be established, it is believed, when committees from the three colleges meet in New York Dec, 3 and 4. Semt-profession alism wil be defined, and summer nadian regiment. work on the defense with Moose Johnson and the forward will bin, Dick Irvine, Tommy Dunder. dale and Harri The Row City combination looks to be one of the best bets in the league,” sald Manager Muldoon Muldoon managed the |Our seasons in the Northwem are baseball disposed of in some way. ‘team last year. Confessions of a Wife LITTLE BOOK, | AM JEALOUS “Margie, I think that Eleanor Fairlow has one of the most de spairing faces I have ever seen,” said Mary, after we left the hos pital this morning. It seems ut terly devold of hope.” Well, you know, Mary, my dear, that poor Eleanor, from being « girl in the very cream of society, has dropped, thru loss of relatives and mone to the skimmed milk of workaday life.” “But,” Mary persisted, “I don’t believe that the work of a hospital nurse would leave that hopeless look upon her face, I have not seen her in a year or so, but I re member then her beauty struck me as peculiarly vivid, as that of a an drunk with the joy of liv Now she looks like the cold, y dawn of the morning after.” “Are you not allowing your im. |agination to play*your usual good | sense tricks, Mary? To me, Eleanor Fairlow shows the that al ways accompanies an overworked body and a disappointed soul.” “That's it,” sald Mary, eagerly She looks soul starved. Her eyes followed you so eagerly, as tho she Are appropriate at all times. We have made a careful selection of flaw- less stones, perfectly cut. These ems can be mounted In settings man- ufactured by us to your order. Diamonds have perma- nent value and are be- coming much more valo- able every year. We have them In all sizes, but the smaller stones are just as precious propor- tionately as the larger ones, GRAHAM & VICTOR Diamond Merchants 821 Second Ave. wanted to love you—wanted you to Jlove her—but that something was always holding her back. Wh Margie, I could see her vistb | shrink when you gave her theflow jers and told her | Dick told you she see her and urge her to come and stay a while with you. “When you sald that, the queer- est look came into her face, as if for an instant her heart had stop- ped beating. It . however, so fleeting that I was not sure I had) seen aright, as I watched her face and lMstened to her cool tones when she said that she ‘had already out- stayed her leave of absence and so it w6uld be impossible to accept | your very kind offer.” “Mary,” I said, fmpulsively, “I am very sorry for Eleanor Fairlow, for I think she {s in love with Dick “Of course, this Is only my own theory,” I hastened to add, as Mary | tried to interrupt me. I have only heard vague rumors and one or | two outspoken ones from Mollie, when Dick and I were first mar ried, to the effect that Dick never paid any attention to any other girl besides Eleanor Fatrlow until he met me.” “Has Dick never you about it, Margie Not a word, and I honor him for it, He knows I must meet her often and whatever may have been between them before I came into his life it would not be honorable in Dick to disclose.” I did not say, little book, what IT thought; that it was what probably was between them now iiat was worrying me. anor Fairlow fs a conundrum to me; she is the woman I cannot understand. I think she ia a good woman—she is kind and symps thetic when physical {lls are con. cerned—and yet she is neithe broad minded nor charitable where other women seem to be soulsick At times she has the appearance of fairly other women. the Idea that have known anything to Always I have had of all the women I would most {n terested in Eleanor Fairlow, if she would let me be so. Perhaps the reason she interests me 1s because she is so mysterfous and perhaps perish the thought—I am Jealou: I wonder, little book, if Richard Waverly, or any other man, is worth the friendship, such as might be Eleanor Fairlow's and mine. How perfectly silly of fe, of course, Dick and Eleanor are | friends, nothing mor ind there is no reason why Eleanor and I hould not be friends. I am going to see more of her. Dick chose me and Eleanor Fairlow is not the woman to wrong another woman, (To Be Continued.) Portland was back in| | town, you determined to come and | hating herself as well as all | ra} Alex Irvine will be! Athletic composed of Captain Oatman, To-) | that as soon as | | | Going Traveling? Leather Luggage of Quality Oshkosh Wardrobe Trunks $25 Up “Values Tell” i YN ALLIS RyouUne Manno gy) Easterners Place Montana Among — Best in Country © Northwest football, and more lege eleven. Eleven games have their way to Portland,|cuse played Princeton, Rochester, F. Brown, Michigan, Mount Union, Colgate and Dartmouth, and every |game was won except two, the %to-0 beating from Princeton and next Wednesday, I don't care who has beaten could|the scoreless game with Dart- beat them Thanksgiving,” said| mouth. Coach O'Neill, in speaking of the| After playing O. A. C,, they em- team. ‘A team that| bark for Los Angeles, to play Occl- “They have good, aggressive game they put up was @ marvel,” continued the Syra-| or. “We have the big: BARTH IS DEAD Many Seattle friends of Peg- By Barth mourn his | death in Cali- | fornia Thurs- | | None of the party offered any| We put our best team on the field and played our hardest. The altitude bothered us very little and the snow storm hindered us no more than {t bothered the Mon-/| tana players. We were lucky to hold the score as we did,” was the | sportsmanlike statement of Cap- tain Walter Rose, at the depot. | Dobie Praised “IT have always maintained that the material was in the West, but) the development was slower out here than in the Eas! said As- sistant Coach Bill Horr of the vis iting squad in comparing the, grade of football furnished by the East and West cept in a few instances, the East has the better coaches and, by the way, that man) Dobie at Washington must be a| wonder. He easily classes with the best {n the country. He must be good to make the record he has.” W. 8. C. beat the Montana team, 29 to 8, and Washington is considered by impartial crit- fes to be at least the equal of the! State College eleven. Washington, | then, is on a par with any uni-| versity team in the land, accord- ing to the statements of the Syra- cuse visitors. “Montana is a better team than Michigan, and if Washington has a better team, then your university must have a great football ma- chine,” commented Burns, the Syracuse end. day. Not yet of his way into the hearts of vleacherites by iis always will- ing spirit. Ifhe lidn’'t always scoomplis h what was ex- pected, he was always trying, and that is all we can expect from any one, BASKETBALL TURNOUTS FOR 4’ TEAM START With the closing chapter of the football season finished, Captain Jack Fancher of the Washington basketball squad has announced ~ the first turnout for the indoor 3 game for Monday, Three men from last year's conference title winners remain in college. 3 Ex-captains McFee and Savage 27 In Party graduated last June with Dick The party, 27 strong, arrived at|Schreuder. Captain Fancher is not 8:30 Friday and departed at mid-| in college, but will re-enter in Feb- night for Portland. Twenty play-|ruary and will be elfgible for the ers, Coaches O'Netll and Horr, two| conference games, Jack Davidson, athletic managers, a trainer, forward, is going to be out for his O'NetlI's son and Birney Lynch,|/old place. Ralph Robinson, the sporting editor of the Syracuse | other forward for three years, is in Post-Standard, who accompanted| college, but is undecided whether the party as the official press man,|to turn out for the Indoor game made up the party this season. racuse has one of the best} A merry scrap {s expected teams in the East and they have| among the second string men to played thru one of the hardest|take the vacant places left by the schedules ever attempted by a col-' graduated heroes, Who’s the Winner? 10 for 5. You know if you've tasted PIED- MONT. No wonder so many men are going after “those cigarettes with the record-making taste.” PIEDMONTS win hands down in every puff of their all-pure Tobacco. cLigeatMyaraebacee Dei Fa Get a “Half Nelson” on the Coupons! Pa sey