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YMUTT AND JEFF—THE ACC STAT@ YooR Name ANd APRN FoR THAT SOB. 'r BEATS BEING sor AT IN Seven ReEcimMeNT QNE-LEGGED BOY 15 STAR ON JAN. 12 The first fancy dress tce car- Miival of tie year will be given ‘Wednesday night, January 12, at the Arena. Eleven prizes are of- fered by the rink management for the best fancy and comic costumes ind for the best imitator of , Chaplin, ing in costume only will be from 8°30 to 9:30. After! that hour the public will be allowed | fee. prises for the different cos-| are: lady's fancy costume—first cabinet of silver, Second prize, electric coffee percolator, Ceream dishes and tray. Best lady's comic costume—firet \ prize, electric table lamp. Best man’s fancy costume—first \ prize, traveling bag, with brushes, and traveling outfit. Second prize, “ghaving glass and outfit. | Best man's comic costume—first Russell Kriss Russell Kriss of Cleveland, hand! capped by the loss of a leg, is one of the athletic wonders of the age He is playing basketball this ter and promises to be a star among high schoo! p{ll shooters. Tennis and golf are the only ma- Jor sports in which Kriss has not participated. Not because he couldn't play these games if he tried, but because he has been so | busy in other athletics he has not had time for them. | Krtss played on seven varsity teams in ade school and was awarded seven letters, He is a broad and high jumper, plays a line position In football and an outfield in baseball He starred in a state Inter. scholastic meet and was sent to other citles to represent his schoo! in sectional athletic tournaments. Kriss has unusual strength in his one leg. He hops about with as much speed as some athletes with two good legs. In basketball, he plays guard and sticks to his opponent like a leech. In jumps, he takes a few hops to, reach the take-off, then his power. | ful leg shoots him into the air as tho it were a steel spring. | Kriss stands high in his school | hoes. imitator of Charlie Chaplin postcard.size camera. Straight STUFF “——By the— Sporting Editor . Jan. 1.—Disposition of American league club in abeyance for 1 week | according to President n Johnson has just from the meeting at Cleve- Several offers for the tnter- C. W. Somets, owner of the }, Will be considered. JOE BONDS IN TACOMA TACOMA, Jan. 1-—Joe Bonds, t champion of the IVE dollare a Northwest, arrived here yesterday minute is pretty big pay, but that to start trdining for his bout with | study classes. is what Tomm) ong henge “ano 4 night. Root | ws os za Phillips, now one | has returned from a success- of the official | Pacific Coast SPOKANE, Jan. 1.—Southpaw a Hartman of Washington State col = Priva Say jlege may be persuaded to report with the Ottawa | |to the Portland Beavers in time for team in 1908 Phillips was about |spring training. Hartman will fin-|the highost paid athlete in sport Ish his course in June, and has) qom Possibly Walter Johnson o |signed a contract to report to Port-| some of the present-day ciahers jland then, but Walter McCredie / got as much now, but at that time |wants him earlier, Mack figures) Phillips was without a peor that Hartman would be & sensation “ee 8 in the Céast if given the seasoning of the spring camp. 10:0 'p. Saturday afternoon. Spect BULL BROS. Just Printere In 1908, Phillips was pl with the Kenora Thisties, a minor hockey league team. Ot tawa was fighting for the cup | in the N. H. A, and some busi- | WILL DECIDE MONDAY LOS ANGELES, Jan. 1.—Frank 9013 THIRD @AIN 1042 | Chance will decide Monday wheth-| ness men raised a fund to get er be will accept the manage Phiilips to join their team. of the Los Angeles Coast I They gave him $1,800 for five ADMISSIO club, he announced terday game Each game has 60 FREE IN penmenatatentntD — minutes of play, and 80 he got TOM SHEVLIN BURIED a halfeagie every time the MINNEAPOLAS, Jan. 1.—~Thomas clock ticked off 60 seconds. | Shevlin, former Yale football star, | pa odie } who died Wednesday, was buried) Before he quit the game two years ago, Phillips was the peer of | |them all at the ice game, He was In Seattle last week to referee the! Seattle- Vancouver game. | se? here yesterday. CHAUNCEY WRIGHT The Restaurant Man Will open the finest lunch room and bakery west of Chicago in the 42-story L. C. Smith Building, | The hockey players in this league are paid about $1 a | minute for the actual time | they spend on the ice, The average salary In the league iw $1,100, Each team plays 18 games, lanting 60 minutes each Gr 1,080 minutes of play for the amanc, | Tie two dentin” wown on the January 15th. Washington State Coltege tear avy Brown toray will not got | ce to show their worth) against the Easternerm, axcept in the substitate role, Coach Diets |has changed bia backfield and SAVE YOUR TEETH jewitched Dietz frem full to end,| [displacing Ray Loomis, the former |Lincoln high school boy. Walter Herreid, the other Seattle boy, was! only a substitate all season. Both boys made thelr letters this| year, and Loomis also made his in 1914. Herreld was a freshman and captained the Lincoln bigh team a |yeur ago. OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS 20T Untversity st. Opposite Fracer-Patercoe Tooth extracted absotutety without pain free from 0190 to © Bm dgily. | Altho the University of Oregon will not be represented by a basket | ball team this season, Bill Hay. |ward, trainer at the Bugene Inst! tution, has organized an all-star |Iineup among the players and will | play off a schedule of games | Hayward's team will be about the jaame Hneup that represented the U. of O. last season, and he is al ready negotiating with conferene ‘tives for games, Oregon decided Coment Filling, 260. Gold Orewns, $8 Nothing but the best matertsl use@—guaranteed for 15 years Amaigam Fillings. 000 to $160 Best gore Crowns t ew or! Gold Alloy Fiilin 1 to 1.00 | Bett get Baeth Lev] Kaaminations Vree. Lady attendant at each oh IDENT PART WASN'T IN JEFF'S CONTRACT LITTLE JEFF, CANADIANS Si an dis a aa | AT INDOOR AND FIELD SPORTS eee STAR—SATURDAY, JAN. 1, 1916. PAGE 7. 1916 tee by vu a Pat "ors BY BUD FISHER WHAT (6 YouR PERMANENT appress? s TH ' { early in the fall that one major sport at the tnatitution would be dropped, and after 4 vote from the students, basket ball was the sport to be decapitated The team organized by Hayward will play under the title of Eugene All-Stars. | | FROM U. OF NEVADA SPOKANE, Jan. 1.—Jerry Nis- en h of the University of Montana football team, it 1s sald has received an offer to coach th University of Nevada team next fall. Nevada returned to the Amer. ican game last fall, but did not get away any too good and the athletic board believes that a good coach would be the best remedy for the situation. MAILS LIKES SOUTH’ SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 1.—Wat ter Mutly, the left-tomled pitcher, | win te aWId to the Brooldyn club tax? aeaton by Seattle and went up for a brie? trial in fast company, | ft tevitte to negeriate with Mana-| ker Badiexan of the Trolley Dotg-| ore that he will be able to stay} ee the Comat during the coming semen. ¥ | Muity ts keen to play with the) San Franetveo club, in the Const) league, avd Manager Wolverton | wants to got his contract, Owing) tw the tact that the Federal league | will dump a supply of extra mate-| rial on the market for use by the) big league clubs next spring, Wol verte belleves he can deal with} Robinyon for Mails. In a wire re ceived’ rom the boss of the Brook lyn team Wolverton was offered a| deal whereby the player would go to San Ffyneiseo, and the mana-| ger of the Seals has announced that it is almost a certainty now that the fornier Seattle star will stick on the Pacific coast, CLARK TO PORTLAND EVERETT, Jan. 1 Jimmy Clark, who finlsed last season with Seattle, has rigned a contract to pitch for the. Portland Coast League club } MORAN 8IGNS CONTRACT PHILADELPHIA, Jan, 1.—The Philadelphia Nationél League club announced yesterday that Pat Moran had signed a three-year con tract to manage the Phillies, + ;|Cold water and 373 Fouetn ANG, New York Cry! iM ace Cane OF IDENT, WwHomM SHALL WG NOTIFY > \ Ie THERE'S GOUNA® BE ANY ACCIDENT, AROUND HERe, YoU Jusr_ NoTiry ME Now. ~ ee, ANDREWS HARD AFTER HEAVY “TITLE MATCH MILWAUKEE, Jan. 1--Tom Andrews, Milwaukee fight pro- motor, thins he has nearkly cinched the bout between Jess Willard and Fred Fulton for the heavyweight title for the local arena. He says his orig- inal offer, made after the first hitch in the New Orleans match of $25,000 for a 10-round bout, was still good. Tom Jones, Willard’s man- ager, y wired Andrews from New Orleans: “| am ready to do busine with you. Meet me in Chicag Andrews left for Chicago last He will discuss the bout nt d thelr managers either late this after. noon of Sunday. MORAN WON'T TAKE JUMPERS FOR PHILS PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Jan. 1 There {s no room on the Phillies! for Mike Doolan, F. Otto Knabe, Tom Seaton, Runt Walsh and Ad Brennan, members of the team who jumped to the independents tn the spring of 1914 Thus did Pat of the champtona, himaeif on record Moran, manage: officially pu in to a wire sent to him at his hom in Fitchburg, Mass. read: “win Knabe, Seaton, firenna ih revert to the Phillies? Do you want any or all of them?” Pat Mora: reply was as fol “1 know all are great ball play ers, but I am out to build up wit young players.” Thia means that {ff any of th players are sent back to the Phi 1 be sold or traded to other teams. RRA) SOLDOUT WAS NAME Soldout was the name of the wrestier who met Zbyszko in emrvy HouUsH EMPTY HEADS— > New York, and not the condition of the theatre where thay ap- peared. (NISSEN HAS OFFER © HAVE OCEAN SWIM SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 1 “Twat a cold and dreary morning after thi night before, but nevertheless hardy band of Olympic club att leten held their annual hike to th ch and dfp in the ocean today “large” i not serve to put a damper enthusiasm of the party on thi | The New Leaf Is Turned What are you going to write upon it? Let one of your first and most sol- | emnly - made resolu- tions be this—‘I will | save and deposit a por- tien of my ineome every week during 1916.” | The Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank will help you keep your resolution. Deposits received up to and including Jan- | uary 8th will receive | interest at 4 per cent | from January Ist. DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK BROOHS anv CHERRY a telegram. Moran's memage was in response The telegram da did it t e b e i biy # above. too burn table jand se altoget peace pact, PHILLIP DE CATESBY BALL a St Phillip De Catesby Ball, who be- comes owner of the St. Louis Amer- ican club, as a part of the baseball Louis million aire and one of the men who made the Federal league possible. Ball spent a young fortune plac- ing a team in, St. Louis to give com- petition to the National and Amert- can league clubs money, but stood ready to continue He lost a lot of the fight if peace arrangements were sot reached The principal owners of the club were Col. Robert Hedges and John FE. Bruce, secretary of the National commission, « Bell says Fielder Jones, who managed his St. Louis Fed team, will manage the Browns, taking the place of Branch Rickey, who has been manager. Rickey probably will practice law, Walker Coburn, 16. |whose performances mark him as lone of the coming great sprinters of they will not be used, but willing country, was a cripple as a baby and owes his chances for fame in the athletic world to the fact that surgeons had the courage to break jand straighten his deformed limbs | Coburn was born bowleaged, dou knee and His hips were out of line, both Bach | t twice, He is now exc below the eg had to be making of New York, When be was 2 years of age, Co was piteed on the operating brok four breaks ptionally DOCTORS BREAK LIMBS OF BOY BORN A CRIPPLE; HE’S COMING STAR SPRINTER | well developed, straight of limb and| strong. The hoy’s ambition is to race into the shoes of Champions Ralph Craig and Alvah Meyer. He runs {if short dashes or plays baseball y and in amateur meets ha: the boyg of his age not o: sprints, bet in the broad jump. The coming star inherits some of his ability to run. His uncle was athlete and one of the stars of Ireland in his youth. Coburn used to run with the boys on the streets of New York, and it was not until the building of playgrounds and the holding of meeta for kids that he got a real chance to show his skill. MARKET REPORT | ] Ccorrected Gally by J. W. Godwin & Co.) | Limburger | Alaska rutabagaa, a n- e| eo \r | Garite. White r | Yakima rida @rapetrutt iver os | Yakima Burbanks . Gems ... 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CITY TICKET OFFICE, Telephone Main 932 7 | PLAY W.S.C. © FROM Cheasty’s Best Wishes for the New Year Look for Cheasty’s Announcement in Sunday Papers and Monday’s Star “Values Tell’’ SEE BROWN ~ PASADENA, Jan. 1.—Over 26,000 people are expected to see the first - big intersectional football game ever played here when the Wash- ington State college team, the un- ‘defeated aggregation from the Pa- | cific Northwest, will clash with the | Brown university eleven, conquer ors of Yale, and one of the fastest collegiate elevens in the Kast. Brown has the advantage of five pounds to a man in weight. W. 8, C. supporters claim that the Speed of their men will far outehadow the Browns’ udvantage in beef. 3 The Eastern eleven favorite in the bettt Brown alumni in California who could possibly get to the game are here, and their backing of their alma mater has foreed the odds up. |There are only a few ex- ton State men in the South, : | The officiais will be Walter Eek- \ersall of Chicago, referee; Dr. A. We — |Smith of Michigan, umpire; J, By Irsfield, Minnesota, field judge; Clyde Holley, Pomona, head lMnes- man, WILL AD QUIT? Ad Wolgast figures on quitting the ring. Ad's g bum mathematician. He has been figuring that way for |] years and hasn't got the an- \T] ewer yet. tinction of the Federal league will — do much toward bringing = baseball players into the fold. fa became apparent today when it — was announced that Middleton of the Oaks has jed that his contract be matied him. He had refused to stand for a cut jin his salary and threatened to jump to the Federals. pase ke r e | CHICAGO HAS INDOOR FOOTBALL LEAGUE j CHICAGO, Jan. 1. | | heated football will be one of the popular indoor sports here this winter. The completion of a league and a winter schedule was announced today. HARVARD AGAINST NUMBERS The most important amendment ~—-@ | recommended by the football rules committee at its meeting here re- cently was a rule compelling the numbering of players by all teams, — A majority of the 14 members are in favor of this rule, but Harvard is strongly opposed to it. * COMFORT and SAFETY Assured Travelers who use the New Through Service Of the Union Pacific System Standard Road of the West The very latest in steel equipment—protected by Automatic Electric “Safe- ty” Signals—are Service Features of the UNION PACIFIC the Line that Joins the West and East with A Boulevard of Steel. 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