The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1916, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Ss STAR—THURSDAY, FEB, 3, 1916. PAGE 7 fe \ ‘|MUTT AND JEFF— 4 A / | ANP THE POOR COW DIED. Tus wan newt. s ra os BY BUD FISHER Cheasty’s KINO Facep GALICIAN Cow IN QUEST OF ETS <s Mate The Store of Preparedness “Everything for Men, and Women That Shop for Pes. Don'r BLAME JEFF, THe cow STARTED IT! if Cory na® Ae Oy mee RejuvenatingtheCubs El GOTCH FAMILY SEEKS WARM CLIME FOR WINTER | Will Frank Chance Make Angels pake Like Much-Feared Chicago Cubs? ||..2°'2.0173.0 ca | ford and the University of Califor | nia are now practically patched up. | Freshmen will be eliminated from competing in athletics at Stanford. This is one of the big con-| cesstons that the U. of C. was aft-| er, The vote at Stanford was} four to one in favor of conceding | jthe U. of C's demand regarding | the freshman rule Saal fowaan nono oa BY M. C. LARKIN LOS ANGELES, Feb. 3.—Tinker) to Evers to Chance! That, tn the) old days, was the battle cry of the) Chicago Cubs when Frank [L.) was their director and also) id one corner of the greatest {n-| field triangle that baseball has ever) known. | A similar cry may resund thru the baseball world again, for Frank Chance, afte: year of rusticating on his Glendora ranch, is back in| the game. | Johanie Powers, worth $9,000,000, | THE a |Ci PORTIVELY speaking, things are pretty quiet in Seat- | tle right now. Nearly every one is too busy keeping the ~ stove hot and the snowdrifts from piling up on the front porch to do ed hot stove leaguing. 4 Bo ot 8 | panne : e } | The fact that Tad Jones has landed the football job at Yale | F L Y I N G | | will no longer give the pharagraphers Pei to wheeze over, Tad was the unanimous selection of the board. The fact that he is a former Yale man in all probability had | a great deal to do with his selection. 3 | Resse se | | | | | | | Before his retirement, Frank L. Chance was the highest pafd manager in organized baseball His salary was $25,000 a year. He went from the Chicago Cubs | tothe New York Yeukess, man | CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE / "ve offered forty thousand | aging that club two seasons, They've o after playing in the National | bones for Willard and | | From Sport Block Thursday night the board at U. of W. will hold its regular | meeting and naturally the campus is again waiting with bated breath the announcement of football coach for © this year. ce: Me After every meeting at which no name was given out interest would lag for a couple of days only to be on the job two-fold as soon as the next week comes around. league 15 years. Moran, The aasiet of Frank Chance is The news has gone abroad | thruout the nation. | And so it strikes the banker or Frank Gotch, hie wi 3 there the tired wrestiing champion will get in condition for his tour with a circus, | It’s a dull day when Benny Kauff! ent to Los Angeles recently for the the common working [winter. Wh man, starting from Topeka, Kea, next April. Gotch will do no hard training. His conditioning will consist of | doesn't issue a new chapter on! There must be lots of coin in [hunting and fishing trips with his old friend, Jim Jeffries, former heavyweight boxing champion. While) “How ! Will Revolutionize the ‘4 ° circulation. with ine circus Gotch will meet all comers. Salary, $1,500 a week; specialty, standing village heroet on National league.” e: lan lg Woe ae |ineir heads. as a If the Cubs can attract as mapy | ——— —, | only one punch. That hey ‘tract tn Spotter they wi Boxing Cheap? Look at England; arte 100 Rounds of It for 25 Cents i «ih mixed boxing mitted in “I Wéw York, Sam Langford will be " able to fight some one aside from) Ted Lewis, the English fighter, |from $1 up for a main bout of from Jim Johnson and Harry Wills. says one of the things that sur |*!x to 20 rounds, with a few short oe prised him most when he came to | Prelims 1 | Fenda Welsh says Charley White) | | Bes | f Mark: T | Fed magnates who bought Into or.) 0 et ‘oday ganized baneball haven't said + il | anything about 10-cent ball yet. as 8 ier for | The fact that Leach Cross is a | dentist doesn't give him a big; | leader of the Chance co} Weeghman raised $75,000 in ten = Tournaments are popular in Eng. @- pull with the referees. ped four pennants and took the | minutes. One would take him for|*h? United States, was the admis: and, according to Lewis, They are |‘ | % 8 | world’s championship twice | a baker instead of restaurant man,|sion charged for bouts and the num-|held every week or #0, and it ts in) A! | Bill Donovan of the Yanks, likes a | ber of rounds @ spectator is al: the tournaments that the Englieh | 22" good joke as well as any one | lowed to see for his money stars get their starts. Cabbage He eas signed Germany Schaef- | In England, Lewis says, you can Lewis started boxing in tourna: |Cal lemons, per crate see 69 rounds, and sometimes 100/ments when he was 16 years of |Cpperttes rounds, for an admission of 25 He weighed 98 pounds. As he Carrots, sack cents, A show nearly always co thru tournaments he Cautifio ts of a main bout of 20 rounds, a tter bouts, and finally |Ce! srapetrule semi-final of 15 rounds, two bouts fought for and won the feather-|pioras srapetrul f Chance took over a third of the 2 oer and was made vice-president lof 10 rounds each and six bouts of weight championship of England | Fora jfour rounds each and Europe. Florida 6! of the organization. In answer to : | 1 box ‘ the clamor of?the fans, the great On some occasions a tournament Lewis has been busier than any |ogrite new manager will stand at the first cor- Judging from the way he gets ihe of 16 ‘bouts, each lasting three boxer in the country during the} 1 and owner of she Los Angeles base-| fer. ball club of the Coast league, is the boy who brought the “Peerless Leader” back to the national pas- m rf tim By a deal tly closed eo ae rank Long Contracts Saves Stars’ Pay While some ®aliplayers will receive salary cuts er, his ob he bi rounds, is provided in adidtion to past two months, and is making so) Endso, hg Pho evel ee of bred ‘eaten eee the regular card. And the whole much money he plans to bring his |¢ this y an pct dic aie season. BOSTON, Feb. 3—A new board) ,,,, hite .200 show can be seen for 25 cents. In/|father, mother and three sisters to| x ee ee ei “I found ranching a bit monoto-|% “irectors to guide the destinies en a man hits .300 in the Eu-\ing United States the prices range|the States to live 2 draw big pay because, during war time, they signed long- term contracts. Joe Jackson, Eddie Col- lins and Johnny Evers have good contracts that h two years to run, Jake ropean war, he is satisfied with a nous.” Chance explained, “so 1 of the Boston Braves was elected iron cress, costing about ibs Sa argey's tata cee mentee of bar” eget gee en's SAL VESON, FIRED BY WICKER, 3, SE aaelepbarabebed Eoeresn war has"cuttwed tre) WILL RETURN TO SPOKANE is": Pr : — ee HERE IT IS|)""" conflict. | Takin : bo Daubert hae 2 nice contract ’ Sal, “ee Turnips sack ie @ that will not expire or where he owns two orange orch- Dave Altizer has retired fr Another pitcher discarded by;young pitcher, altho shy on con-| three years and so has ards. In 1914, when he left the|| Here, There and Everywhere}! i. “xinneapolla team, thereby |Bob Wicker in 1915 hax been sign-|trol, Nick Williams held him tn |Peltcteve $s George 8 lankees and retired to his ranch,| revealing the secret of his age. | 4 by President F. C. Farr for the high esteem and nursed the boy | Yeniow e The contracts of Ty Cobb j he said he was thru with baseball. Short Sport oe. /1916 Indians. Some weeks ago|along. Toward the end of the sea-| staymi and Walter Johnson, calling It is with open arms, therefore, No man vYoluntarily retires | Farr told young Elmer Leifer to| son, he began to come and he won [Rome ae ie SB for big sums, will carry that the Grand Old Game ts wel- | M i ean | fill his own salary terms, and now) five of his last six games like a} coming him back. The heavy snow gathered on the [fey ce tendt hee ora, UBICSS | ne has announced that while he|real champion, in spite of the fact |Ontens, ereen Manager Chance has been termed |top o: the football grandstand at ee jwas in Bytte he signed Herbert | that his club was a hopeless tall- | Oregon ontone . a hard man to work for. He ac-|the university caved in the roof} with the revival of hand gren-| Salveson for another tryout ender. Every, manager in the | T**!mae ontons them thru this year. 3 Raity” Potatore quired that reputation, he ex- Wednesday. valuable |. There is an oddsstory in Salve-| league was after “Sally” for 19 Sf ? SAYS REPORT UNTRUE plained, because he was out fight-| Frank Farmer meete Eart Miebus| sage, tieine Zim would bea valuable | son's case, He was with the Port but, largely thru his friendship and | CHICAGO, Feb. 3.—Tom Jones ing every minute for every ball/in a six-round bout at Portland Mon-| Jonn McGraw on the prmpne ng line land-Ballard club in 1914 and was, Williams and the MeCredies, Sal Sweat potatoes | Jess Willard's manager, branded |J McG R we ° | game, and insimed that his men do | day. ‘and Heine can heave one fron: Pots jeonsidered a pretty promising! veson was turned Farr’s way Hkewis Tex Rickard is still trying to land to Part cul, 2, Just one of the players.” |a bout between Willard and Moran heap ha ahaeel eae ance stated. “All I ask im that| Local boxing fans may see Jimmy| Columbia university has appropri- a player keep in condition and give|Fox, the San Francisco feather: | sted real money for its band, on the the club his best. I expect a man|weight, in action here. He claims | theory that music will eoothe the to carry out orders. If the mistake |the Coast title untrue today the report from New ——@ York that Jack Dillon was to be Veat"aa Pena e=™ | |Willard’s next opponent Scone Mt ; | Al Sommers just about spilled the soup on his pugilistic career by 7 ast x enemy's savage breast. Possibly “% @ the stunt he pwied. Sommers ee ne ne Sans ar ne it Ie @ great little theory, but every | = wt was a mighty clever boy for a eee oe payee nets {0 °°") BRAVES HAVE EARLY GAMES |time we hear a college band we fee! You've CHEWED THA RAG WITH THE green kid and gave much promise NELL COUCHOIS "in baseball, as in anything elee,|_, 7 Boston Nationals will meet like throwing a brickbat. COOK AND SNE'S LEFT! AS WARD an The fact that he is only a green the best way io win is to beat the|o" teir apring training trip, ‘Two| BACK TO PITTSBURG | as 17 18 YO GET 4 SERVANY YOU 100 @1 soared A real Indian maiden, Miss Nell -pther fellow to the first punch and| ames will be played with the, When ether lips and other INSIST ON DICTATING ABOUY EVERY FOR WOMEN ONLY Couchois of St. Paul, Miun., “has sive ball club A my aim ttm Seo gee ype sac March te fonguce 2 a LuTTL£ THING! =NoW You CaN Root Piite: the weit pecan sone eet ‘now beng held aa er 31 and Apri ,» both at Jackson. eir fairy tales shall tell, 00) he wel nown $i 3 a D players don't fght every inning of vitie, Fla. The Braves will meet| I"ll spin a good one that will tt Ya 8 NEXT THO os Aehabeed MALE y atte | oe Eat ty | sport,“ sovern "aaa ry . Bet men that! peockiyn at Palm Beach, and pl make wi ‘3S MELPING WITH THE HOUSE e Northwest will. Run out every hit, take ad- Cure y e most obstinate, The real name of the Indian against thegNew York Highlande! Them crawl back In their WORK AND HUNTING ANOTHER ONE vantage of every chance, Lit the 6 el ca in 3 to 10 days. Price | maiden is O Rana Qua du Ques, dirt hard and don't be afraid to caretnas. ee sia alt alaat Pittsburg [Native Waentngton $2 per box. or 4 for $5. matied in which means “The Cloud Nearest | wi be ke shea teeta s aes} — crack, | ative tneton a | Pi30; Sundaya, 11 tol. Main Heaven.” She lives north of St. noc! nm ie outfield— | | Who at the champ would take a creamery, solid pack a RAYMOND REW oi Paul with others of her tribe. that’s the way to win ball games!| TIM WILL HAVE TO WAIT | Cheese Room 4, Hotel Antler and The carnival is a revival “Next to fighting spirit, | want| Tim Murnane, who says that he whack, Domestte wheel 2 of affairs of the kind held 20 vears speed on my club. My experience {s thru with baseball, will probably, 8ut ea ba offered a ton of i fiw | You are not making a mistake | #0. Men, women and children are in the East showed me that win- have to wait some little time for ny, apr e ” ‘when you use Star Want Ads, contesting in snowshoeing, skat- ning teams are built around speed. |his salary ae president of the New wiveacalee ye ath af 21 ing, tobogganing and other sports, hoe beet ae wen tee Jim Coffroth complains because 3 “ Be z the California floods spread over hin aus tenawe eame' ee, to ane Or eee ee end | Ted Sullivan is planning @ trip|rig Juana race track at night, with elect Tench eggs, : e could change their style of attack to Pan-America next winter with ’ . § and keep the other club guessing. two all-star baseball teams. Ted Yt warning. He probably would § In securing players for the Los\had better talk to Ban Johnson have moved the plant if they had | Angeles club I will have that point | before he starts any more barn. been warned. in mind more than any other.” i storming exhibitions. 319s — Country Hay and (Prices paid produce: | aitaita, No 1 | Rariey Bt OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS 20T University st. Opposite Fraser-Paterson Teeth extracted absolutely withoet palm free from 8:30 te © p m. daily. Peace in the majors has brought a great surplus of ball players = = = ? — . = = a 1 ua owners have been SEATTLE HOCKEY CLUB |i @r2.00 jer 18.00 | Sratw 12.00 ers at major league salaries j | Tiimathy i200 Bastien heat @38.60 | SPEND PILE ON CADDIES DARTMOUTH | NZ j CHAMPIONSHIP HOCKEY SYRACUSE TO MEET | It is belleved that the 76 clubs = A fhe football teams of Dartmouth Li aha Meat oiine Gore waieee Victoria VS. a ] ag ebony hh ag jtion spend more than $1,000,000 on e e next season at Springfield, Mass. |caddies each year. The price to the | Nov. 4 has been set as the day for caddies for the round of the link } ‘ | he links . Be. Gold Crowns, $3 ‘ the game, which In recent y varies between what the caddies YT 7 he beet material used—guarenteed for 13 yeare Friday, February 4, 1916, 8:30 P. M. haw been the last onthe r themselves charge, which is about || Amalgam Fillings..8ee to 61.00 | Best Gold Crown A a team's schedule will be the first 50 ce da crisp ep Tickets on Sale at Arena Office, 1220 Fifth Ave. ae cada oy Oo einsntennen Caen ts cents, and a crisp bill, depend Gold Alloy Fillings. .61 to 61.50 ling on the generosity of the play Springfield in 10 years. ers. |

Other pages from this issue: