The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 1, 1916, Page 11

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THs “RYR® HOG? OP Yours 's THE BONK. HO HAD AIS TRY VPI THE AMR WHICH Mea, FALL 1S SARE” AND We oo CAPTURED RIGHT Away TTNFALLIBLE, MY ever ARTUR WE WERE SenTENceD To BE SHOT HE Sri KEPT HIS TAIL (IN THE AIR, u IN STINCY To SCENT DANGERS INPALLIBLE ™ A We. BRED tie ti con wee Wide SULTATION FREE a husband and wifes 2 moderate, eta) ATTORNEYS—PATENT_ rae r famonds and offices American Jewelry C GE WARTEN'S remed ‘Rese; highest references Rast 7 ina Fak Ooi i ise LAWYERS conmultation iron Bide Main t78t A nnn BL MOVING AND STORAGE AUTO DELIVERY 60, Aistance moving Bitiott 254 AY TRANePER CO sonata goods moved. Rest ho Mavic Pub Co. 205 Pine OPTICIANS OPTICAL Dd, FRED P. GORIN Fee As goeu refunded 701 Cent eo attorney. Fe ave Phone W aes CE. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS De KATHRYN HARRISON—001 & wort Stes. Dat ges Bide TOM—akin diseases only tan Phrenologist MADAM KIRL the Wonderful EGYPTIAN PHRENOLOGIST As your head fust LOCAL :NTATIVES pare time each da Haye you « it vor ee quarter @ im pvel-a-week in standard-price, in atx MAIN 94 paper deltver onth, You w The Star hereafter high-class novel, complete Ite the biggest fietion offer of year, Main 9400 is the number, ~~ Ee rs SAEESIO feet Be 5 POPULAR- ” Patent viy government Fees Pan book-aize installments Vacation Time Is Here volitans Disband nd a OON the members of the Geattle loo hockey septet will be scatter ing to thelr various homes, not to return again until next win. Some of them may not be with us then, % Ss It appears unilkely that Rowe will be seen In a Coast league hockey uniform again, business man and h ‘S ter, Robert hae a hunch that he ls a purchased a part Interest in Springs, Cal. Bobby le a married man and Renfrew, Ontario, Is his home, %3 83 8 ott ot Jack Walker will return to Fort Willlame for the summer. There he has charge of a wrecking train. He g a vaca tion each year to play hockey. Jack Is single, Re ee Bernie Morrie, another benedict, lives in Brandon, Manitoba. He wil! return there, where he is a checker in the mines, it ls his duty to check all trains carrying ore to and from the mines. Raw es et Frank Foyston, the handsome captain, who Ie stil! single, girls, will beat it to hie home n Mininssing, Ont. Frank's folke own a large farm, and the capt’n says he is going In for the quiet life this summer, 8 8 8 “Cully” Wilson doesn’t know Just what he will do es yet. He may go to Canada and play lacrosse, or may remain here and play base- ball. He le endeavoring to catch on with Joe MoGinnity at Butte, He Is an Inflefder and played In the Canadian league two years ago. % 8 tf gs Ss Harry Holmes, the goalie, who played a great game this sea- son, Is a bloomink plutocrat. Harry has extensive min- Ing Interests in Northern Ontario and will put In his time there this summer. He's married and makes his home in Toronto, Rx RRS Ed Carpenter lives at Fort Williams and le Canadian Northern railroad. winter to play hockey. He Is stil! single. 3 i oe OO conductor on the @ poor start, will return to his home In Ottawa, Bw RR | Pete Muldoon, the pilot of the squad, who declared his home wae In | Seattle, Portland, Vancouver and other places, will remain here and embark in business. Pete still retains hie freedom, Ren we ws iy | Tom Longboat Is capable of lead-; boys worked fast when {t came SA ~~~! ing the Germans a merry to attaching thelr John Henry OSTEOPATHIC P HY 81 ne and ietting the meal ticket back URS | As far as we can learn, the reason| to headquarters _CIANS AND S = Saamere Frank Gotch didn't take allem’ t ms Bank Bide | Santell was because Ad c separ a | make a noise like a million dol EGAN BATTLES TO EYS | lars and Frank wouldn't fall for any less. 3 8 ral! J. Frank Baker, home run maker, | te | {9 up against a stiff proposition. | Fans will expect him to biff the | pill at a 1,000 clip after his sea in town today, Last nist " | G ght hie son in the Hot Stave league taiddionalgia= ‘agit ‘Onley Egan, went four rounds to a tle finish with Billy Weeks, the EVERETT, March 1—Fred die Bogan Is the happlest man Johnny Evers Is a baseball slave. he ii »,000, with two more The local lad wae outpoint. 5O. Al o, he will get a bonus ed In the first three rounds, | 600 if the Braves win the, but came-back strong In the at with $600 out off that |~l2et frame age sgt Hg Ae Al le On the same bill Leo Houck Riced off it they. finish | went to a draw with Bert — pe Forbes, Casey stopped De- eee | laney and R lost to Da. the Cleveland team) V!dson. The reason | was called the Indians after Nap | Lajote left was because {t was AGGIE GRAPPLERS ARE COMING figured it was in the same class | as the Reds. | The wrestlers of O. A. C. and U. st tt tt of W. will go to the mat here Sat There Is only one better maxim In|urday night, A seven-man team TESTING __| golf than keep the eye on the|will be sent North by the Oregon <aatn BW Hae. 330 Pine st Main 481%. | ball, It 1s, keep two eyes on It. | school, IRENOLOGISTS % 8 ot The 0. A ©, basketball quintet PHRENOLOGI nF ~|Very few players are holding out|walloped Willamette Tuesday night, MADAM ASMARA in the big brush this year. The'17 to 13 | MARKET REPORT ~ ss _- ——— | Hweet potatoes ....... 60+ | Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers for | carla Rose aned potatoes. Vegetables and Fruit ° “§ | Poa (Corrected Gally by J. W. Godwin & Co.) | 1 125 | @ 4O 09% OM Prices Paid Producers for Keus, oultry, Veal and Pork Hens, 2 Ihe and under 16 roosters, live rT} Pork, good block hows * @ 09 juabs, good wlze, dow. 100 @ 150 rkaye, u Ty oo @ 1 a lve oo 109 Selling Prices to Retailer tor ‘4 Butter, Kgas and Cheese Batter Washington 10 mery, brick 1) e200 | Washington @ 20 | creamery, solid pack ” 2 | Cheese 25 | Domeatio wheel ’ ” y Limbureer _ 2 @ on Oregon triplete wien rt Yakima rutabagas, sack sconain t 4 at Turnips, wack 135 Washington t : 21 penne | Young Amerion 23 ' * 1 1 ° . 136 @ 160 |f ntry May ond Grain f 160 @ 200 || paid produc I 126 @ 1.60 ° ue Ontons Alfalfa, No. 1 | P 26 | Marley @10.00 aot 02% | Iiantarn Washington onts. 81.00 22.00 , ‘ Puget @12°00 Potatoes 36 ; 18 White river Yakima Borbanks Tekime Gems the Sa PARDONED AT ONCE He gets a vacation each | Roy Rickey, who came along by leaps and bounds after getting off to DRAW WITH WEEKS | STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAR. 1 1916, PAGE 11, eo a THEN NE CROPS MIS TAIL ne WHILM MEANS DANGER. 'S VPON US! we GING UP HOPE AND ARS SsAcEe TWAY Gives MG A CWwe!} maveg © HAD THE SIGWALS RE VERSED, TAIL UP MEANS TAIL Down ‘Sare” MAKES AM) \ | | | | a) Japanese Cue Wielder Is a Wiz at Game | “Ho holds his cue as he would |hold a woman's hand tn a graceful |fox-trot. His pose ts artistic and the daintiness of his mantpulation has to be seen to be thoroly appre ctated. Yamada’s billiards are at once elegant and very much to the |point—the acme of form tn mo! j ways than one.” | This is what R The Great WE When the first 1 And awir with @ nit « When t s back In the sky on the call comes out of the alr reach for the fron keen B. Benjamin has Ito say of the bilifard game played| To seek throu o melt by Koil Yamada, the Japanese cuc 7 of the Ancient Green. |wiz who meets Willie Hoppe in dream that will never dle, leight blocks of an exhibition! When the pink gets back in the sun |match of 400 pointe, beginning |And the blue gets back in the sky. | | Wednesday at the Brown & Hulen| wien the white-marked courts are| | parlors ne, Benjamin is @ well-known sports-| And the first serve rings co; | |man and promoter, Ho is handling| When the first clean s oes | [the tour of the two green cushlon | fiash ta'an open apace artists. He was here last with| ini | t Hoppe and Inman | Koji Yamada was born at Tokto, iat back in the sun back tr |January 29, 1888, and {s only os sede |three months younger than Cham An outflelder who was tried last pion Hoppe. season sburg club fig | Yamada first ntarted playing at) yred tn ar Middle Weste the age of 12 and has followed It! romance a few years ago. He wa religiously ever since, He went to/in the Central league then and fate \ Germany about four and one-half) came upon him as he was sitting years ago to study medicine, but) i, the dining room of a hotel in | gave that up and devoted his whole} south Bend, A waitress hurrying itime to billiards. He won the|jast gpilled a plate of hot soup |champtonship of Germany, also| Gown his neck making the German record of 295| phe pall player was in the championship game. scalded that it was necessary to| Yamada came to America about|take him to a hospital, The con two and one-half years ago, and, 1n | trite waitress called every day to| the first tournament he played, de|«ee how her victim was getting | feated Hoppe, in a moat sensation-| aiong. In two weeks he was well al game, by three points. He fol-| enough to walk out and marry the| |iowed up that very fine perform-| waitress. Strangely enough, six |ance and again defeated the Amer-|traveling men and a visiting lec so badly a fean champion, scoring 400 to/turer were acalded by hot soup at Hoppe's 156. When the Jap 068 that same South Bend restaurant | in for a game, he plays the game! within a month and lets everything else slide. He| see may not sleep on the table, but tt is safe to say that he comes very var having his meals served on it ‘ practices all the time, not spas: | Fritz Maisel, Lee Magee and Hughie High will comprise the Yankee outfield this season. Maisel goes to the gardens be- modically like some of our cham-| cause of the acquisition of |pions, He is cool, steady, conf-| “Home Run” Baker, who will dent and determined. He has tho| 41) hig shoes at third base. Japanese mathematical mind and 8 he has the Japanese persistency His cue manipulation {a wonderful and fascinating, as woll as always |being graceful and delicate, John H. (“Honus”) Wagner, the grand old man of baseball and vet n of 19 seasons, 18 hopeful of playing séveral years more. The Pirates’ great shortstop and batter celebrated his 42nd birthday last HARSTAD GOES TO PORTLAND PORTLAND, March 1,—Pitcher| Thursday. He preserves his great | lraratad, former Northwestern | strength by clean living cm leaguer, has b turned over to | Samm — — Portland by Cleveland, He pitched | for the American league club last year, | Broadway's ball team will be strengthened by the return of Ed Hunt. He has played on some of the best amateur ball clubs in the clty, ‘ Sundays bs Night, 10-12 =. m, 8-5 p. m., 10:80» m. Band evenings and Saturday afternoon. Spectaiors 10¢ | WELL, HGS GoT ' HIS TAL Down vow) L/h je SO AW mur =n ¢ tT MUST HAVE BEEN MY misTAKe BE PORE, Ge CAUSE A WR BeeD “Lrrne Hog’ Never! & |pick a fight with | was the property days and give Owner Farr some| valuatl assistance tn straighten: | |ing out the club's affairs. oe The contract of Herbert Salve | son, pitcher, haa been received at }Indian headquarters. A letter |from Evan Evans saying that he ‘ROGER MAY ACCEPT | \Rresnahan today considered an of. "| erwe' | Chet |and Forrest Cady Copyriaht, 1916, by MG Wisher ‘Trade Mark Kee, U. & Pat. ¢ XV Ge STAKe everrnr ie MORELAND IS OWNED BY GIANTS President Dugdale of the Giants, altho wanting Jude Moreland, the recruit pitcher, very badly, will not the Salt Lake club to get him. Blankenship promised Moreland | a job last fall and then did not take the youngster. Later More-| land saw his name among those re leased by the club. He immediate ly signed a Seattle contract. As} soon as Mlankenship learned this) he set up a how! that Moreland| was his property. How he figu | this out, however, would make an/ | Interesting puzzle to ponder over. | Dugdale said Tuesday that he had written Moreland and told| him to write to the National Com-| mixsion and he would find that he| of Seattle. If {nquish all claims not, Dug will re! Pitcher Ely, sold to the Oakland | club last fall by Tacoma, hi been | given the blue slip. Ely ts a free| agent, and Russ Hall may give him a trial. Nick Williams will be on the Job early in Spokane. He will take a} jaunt North within the next 10 » for the spring ‘on has been received was tra’ Lh wwe K te | Evans is the southpaw Spokane se-| Foyston cured from Portland. $10,000 FOR JOB March 1.—Roger | CHICAGO, of $10,000 cash from Chas shman, owner of the Chicago for the surrender of his two- with that year contract to play club, It is generally expected | Bréesnaha pt it. | will acce Se eeeaeetntan ) MASCOTT WON'T COME | | ° There does not seem much of a| chance for local boxing fans to see Billy Mascott, the Portland feath- silly was recently to meet Leo Houck , but wanted the Smith bulld ing to pay us a visit. Jimmy Fox, the Coast champ, will be shortly | : | here Baseball | Roger Bresnahan haa not been! unconditionally released by the| Cubs, as Was reported, President Weeghman declares Bresnahan {s still the property of the Cubs, and} that two clubs are seeking his serv- ices . Cub fans, who wondered at and admired the fast fielding | of Cy Williams, will see the tall fielder in a Cub uniform, as Weeghman says that under no condition will he dispose of him. o- eee Fred Hart, former Cub trainer, has accepted a similar position with the-Brooklyn team of the Na- tional league. He will report to the team {n the Fast and from there go with {t to Daytona, Fla, see Wild Bill Donovan and 15 of his Yankea clan are at Macon, Ga., training, and J. Franklin Baker 1s among them. It is reported that | Raker's salary will be between 500 and $10,000 a year, | Benny Kauff, the Glant out- fielder who modestly admits that he can hit that apple, must prove his ability to the American public. He Is going to do alot of his batting against left-handed pitchers, and his record shows that he 18 no acrobatic marvel atydo- Ing such, Tt has been reported in Roston that, besides “Smoky Joe” Wood, three other world’s champions are to be released soon. Catchers Thom the ex-Portland boy, and Pitcher Col-| mentioned lins are those ANDY IS HAPPY ON NEW JOB SAN FRANCISCO, March 1 The University of California has some mighty nifty football material Coach Andy Smith ts highly elated over the outlook for the coming season, Locals Play jenough |in a hairline score of | when the season opens. BY BUD FISHER OW ncennee 1 | Rings Around Portlanders Seattle's hockey team may not) ve been good enough to cop the Coast league gonfalon, but Just the | same the local septet looked good | Tuesday night to adminis-| ter a 14-to-6 drubbing to the Port land champs | In the first two periods !t was a ¥ slaughter. The \ ee locals put over scores with the | ease that was | like taking con- | ections from an | infant, | Portland heft to itself in | the final frame, however, and ran the gauntlet for | six hand-raisers, The showing of his team greatly | annoyed Manager Ed Savage. It| seems almost certain that Portland will get to ndok up with the win- ner of the N. H. A. for the world’s | ttle, and the showing the boys made Tuesday night was not en- couraging to their boss. “Cully” Wilson cracked the ice} last night—the tce that has been keeping him from starring of late. got He was the star of last night's ses- sion. The peppery little puck} chaser put over elght of the 14| scores made by our side. The line-| ups | Seattle. Portland. Holmes . spina Murray | ROW 5.3530 Bn Jobnson | Carpenter RD. .» Oatman | Walke zs Uksila Morris .C..... Dunderdale | L. W Wilson .......R. W.. Substitutions—Barbour for Dun- derdale, Rickey for Rowe, Rowe| for Walker, Walker for Morris, Rickey for Rowe, Rowe for Morris, Foyston for Rowe. Score by periods Seattle — 5 6 3—14 00 6+ Harris + Todin| Portland— | High School Athletics Broadway held basketball race by triumphing over {ts lead in the Ballard Tuesday night, 35 to 1.| The much-touted Ballard spurt | spent the evening elsewhere than as a member of the basket tossing squadron, Queen Anne and Lincoln staged | a hard-fought contest that ended to 26, Lin- | coln was on the winning end. Franklin its old ri scored a victory over , West Seattle, by the score of 39 to 29. The West Siders | showed considerable !mprovement over their past performances. ee The Lincoln midgets grabbed off | first place by trimming the Queen Anne youngsters, 24 to 10, ° ° Clothier, the Franklin kid pitch- er, is going to be in fine form He ts in| playing | | good condition from basketball, Paul Duryea, the city track star of last year who has been in Mex- ico for some time, is coming back and will register at Broadway ia O mm I to nature. naturally cured. om roi Seytrts . ProrensetRicalod she Coie toad | O'Connell rooters leaped onto the F you want to really live, get close If you want to really smoke, get close to VELVET— Nature’s best tobacco, At Cheasty’s SMART CLOTHES to fit the Hard to Fit New Spring Styles Arriving Daily $15 to $50 “Values Tell” ee TALLIS MILLER IS STILL THE CHAMPION PORTLAND, March 1.—Walter Miller still 1s middleweight wres- tling champion of the world today, ~ but he realizes that he was ing tussle last night. It took him 68 minutes to make Eddie O'Connell holler “Enough” the first The second fall he secured in minutes. The bout was nip and tuck for the first hour, with each man ab ternately having an advan hose f thru a quick move, M got O'Connell in a hammerlock, ~ strengthened it with a head hold, and tore a bunch of Ngaments ia t Irishman'’s shoulder. Them O'Connell howled dolefully, while the referee biandly asked him if he had had enough. A lot of ” mat and separated the wrestlers, fearing their man would be hurt. After 36 minutes of ti Miller got the second fall, with a — reverse bar leg hold and a head- lock. Dogdom is having its inning at Madison Square Garden, New York, with a field of 2,584 bow. wows blending growl The event, conducted by the West minster Kennel club, opened with two new records estab- lished by the entry of 192 fox terriers and 116 German sheep dogs. In addition the other breeds numerically are the Bow ton terriers, 140; bulldogs, 136; collies, 133; beagles, 126, and Airedale terrier: 120; Pom- eranians, Pekinese and Brussels Griffons are leaders in the toy dog section. FRISCO SEES GOOD TUSSLE ON MAT SAN FRANCISCO, Marsh Fans are unanimous fn pronoul ing the match between Ad and Jess Westergaard, which went to a draw last night, the best bout San Francisco has seen in years, Neither man could down the other, and, at the end of two hours and 24 minutes of tugging, the police stopped the affair. Both tried out all the holds in thelr repertoires without avail. PRINCE HENRY IS A ROYAL RUNNER Prince Henry, third son of King George, Is just about the swiftest young man wearing royal raiment. The titled youth gave his daddy's subjects something to talk about when he ran one mile In 4 minutes and 54 seconds, He wasn'ts run- ning to catch a train, nor was he running away from anybody. He was Just one of the schoolboys wh started In ti nnual junior mile race at Eton The prince finished fourth, “all in,” as the race was a gruelling one, owing to a high wind and cold, driving rain that swept down the track, La Fray, the Broadway for is going to turn out for baseball. TTT nyt tat gy oy

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