The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1916, Page 11

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mee RE ARES ORES OE? ASE Pay Saaas ‘ bhme | PATENT RE <* 8] | Steg, tl Ssea] BSQga] | <<< Sassi is” ait SS Sesh Stsasss 3h Fil {perking in One Beddler was one of the greatest nny UST te U UY ils —_—_ BY THE SPORTS EDITOR (eng & Little Bit his and | It's the man behind the gun | Who does the 6 | It’s the player, 1 That makes th And the pit For wh Cannot win u His brains « e dat, hit } » the mound | | ¢ rooting is he'll use t It's the way a song ts sung ‘That tells the story; fo a voice you must add Personality, for the memories that are | Ph raxed wit Annie Laurte ‘That have destined “her™ For immortality ua ou SEEMS certain that Eddie Ma- T= ot Harv will take up upon The great diamond positively | profess duation this mson foot as not at be will do so, but there are go many stor to that effect coming from sources that are re Hable, that there fs little doubt of intention. - za 8 . Mahar a ver romising colle “4 ‘The greatest feat of his career was the shutting out of the world’s champion Red Sox in Boston this sprice az Re imeon star did not take een very seriously until this year, His interest was centered fn footd: For three years he ranked as an All-American back, | and last fall, when he captained | the Harvard team, was generally | Tegarded as the greatest halfback | tm the country. 2a 8 Wie football career Harvard's defeat of Yale vember. He must efther turn to the diamond as an outlet for his} Athletic genius, or retire from the ‘The wer is said to be causin pot due to the fact that the/ stopping the G | Glavenich, the husky Seattle moundsman, huried a good game, but was Inclined to be wild at times, for the visitors, but was a bit off on his fielding. How It Happened at Faille onslaught yesterday dropped the game, 6 to 2. STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 5, 1916. PAGE 11. NORTHWESTERN LHAGUB | AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LAOUB Wea. Lost Pot.) von, Loat Won, Lest, Pot, Butte 8 8 488! Washington tio | Brookiyn . & Spokane ‘ a 4 ' 11) Boaton 1 oe Great Pull 4 8 on ' #66 | Philadelphia ‘ 611 Seattle * en oe | ‘ Cin-innatt 6 te Vancouver e 6 4M ’ awe ‘ on Tacoma » 8 the Ty Loute ‘ mn 10 ttebure 1 an Results it |New York 2 164 At Meat a) At Ta | atm At ane 6 Ath ko At Pt At Ch At Phi Av? | at Be ow ost Louis , Cincinnatt 4 @y was equal to the task of The result was Seattle ~ Ta oma plays here Monday Washington 6 Rick Leads Racing Field---As Entrant “Rudy” Kalilo pitched in fine style HAP MORSE was the star of the| session. | | LOTS OF PEP featured the meles. | SEATTLE HELD the lead until | PE sass | ae me PO A the eighth Morea, 20 ‘ Oe ee oe M rt ‘ ¢@ 4 ¢ 0©| KALLIO DIDN'T allow a bingle| mningham, ef . . : 4 : ® or anything resem ne it, in the , firet two frames. ‘ : 1 ’ : o . : o . : ' . al 2 ¢ 6 6 ¢|. BILL ROSE will be on the hill ‘ 1 ' ' ' ¢ for our side today : 1 ' ‘ Pan Nl Pus ° EVIDENTLY HURLEY had the + “eof ear i 4 right hunch in shaking up bis bat *Batted for Raymond tn ninth ting order Great Falie— ABR HPO. A Price so $ @ @ 6] HURLEY WAS CHASED from : ; H 4 3 $ the coach line for pestering Luke.| + +: 8 3 8). THIS BOY KALLIO looks Iike al # © & $ & 43/¥ery good fitng He must learn ‘ e i , i ® to field, howeve es is art ay ee * ¢ ¢ 1 8 8! WALLY CADMAN started the 10 ry a hitting for the Giants by innings / 2} GUIGNI'S HIT tn the seventh J Pate * gave the Giants an edge, but they | dite — ¢ Stolen base Struck out—By Eastley 3, dy toh ¢, by Katllo 3 mond at man, DIETZ COACHING TRACK ATHLETES AT| WASHINGTON STATE! PULLMAN, May 5.—Carl Dtetz,| |@ stellar member of the W. 8. C.'s/ football and track last four years, is as Kallio @ to Raymond to Brooks Morse to Brooks 1 rua and 8 hite off Glave by Ry Walked Double plays Cadman Pitehers teams for the ing Coach J. F. Bohler tn rounding the track grind shortage of tennis balls. This {s| men tnto condition for the season's The auburn-haired athlete armies of Europe are using them has full charge of the track team for ammunition, but because the/ this week during the absence of who tn times of peace are Coach Bohler, and ts putting the! engaged in their manufacture are men on edge for their first con- ammunition works. fe goon as the European rulers ‘will undoubtedly stop the war im- mediately. % 3 time turf enthusiasts wil! hear with regret that Clarence H. ‘Mackay’s great stallion Meddler/ dead. News to that effect has’ fast reached this country. The} racer and sire died last ‘week in the stud tn Normandy. | 2 J horses in the history of the turf. Tn his racing days he won over half a million dollars in purses. And he has been most successful asa sire. ‘This Pleasant Weather Is a Gentle Reminder That It Is Time for That pring uit | Let It Be a DUNDEE Made to Order | } | } poseenh eo | | Continually you hear about these Clothes. Don’t you think it about time to investigate our display of Spring and Summer patterns? You. We'll surely please 304 PIKE ST. Open Till 10 P. M. Saturday | Walla. | ference meet Saturday, when they 2 ft | meet Whitman college at Walla Tinatening tne tennis word they WAR HASN'T STOPPED AUSTRALIAN RACING ii | The European war hasn't affect.|BIGAILON AND NEIDOFER ed horse racing on the Australian turf. ord amount 75,000 was winning nags What ts claimed to be a ree- was distributed purses during the past season {n | dectding block of the billiard tourn the Antipodes, when more than $3,-,ament at Brown & Hulen's, awarded owners of This amount in- | Seymour. cludes sums distributed for Mat and) Jumping races at meets, both me itt 61 and 40. fn istered and unregistered. Frank Baker Hits Demon Rum on the Nose NEVER SWING ATA HIGH BALL! C) ATHLETIC Northwestern BASEBALL GREAT FALLS Vs. SEATTLE Today, 3:00 Admission, 25 and 50 Cents. Tacoma Opens Monday. Take Fourth Ave. Cars REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our | (whalebone) plate, which is lightest and strongest does not cover mouth; you can bf cob; guaranteed Gold crown . $15 set of teeth (whale! $10 set of teeth Bridge work, per tooth, gold @ White crowns ..-++. Gold fillings ...-+ Stlver fillings . Platina fillings . the roof of aeeensees TBO new the plate known, the corn off the years. $2.00 bone) $8.00 8. oo $3.00 1.00 up 600 All work guaranteed for 15 years. Have tmp ing and get teeth same day fon taken in the mern- Pxam- ination and advice free. 4 and Bridge Worn Tent of OHI Cut - Rate ¢ Samples of Oor Plate We Stand Time nage ts 4 Dentists S07 UNIVERSITY ST. Bagecits Yreecr-Patersee Us, couldn't hold it CY NEIGHBORS pinch-hitter, | BOOST FOR “Hurley day.” THIS 18 failed as a “Ladies day.” HARRY HOWELL shows some clas as an umpire. | ROADS IN SHAPE FOR COAST TOUR CHICAGO, May 6.—Barney Ol4- field ts here with a message of chéer to motorista who look for being the first entrant tn the sixth Eddie Rickenbacher, at Right, and Mechaniolan. (inset) “Rick” Driving 100 Miles an Hour international sweepstakes race | billed for May 80 on the Indlanap | olf INDIANAPOLIS, May 5-—To Bé- is automobile speedway, and he CHANGED LINEUP WINS | [WATCHING THE THREE LEAGUES] GAME FOR GREAT FALLS FROM OUR BOYS, 5 102 BY EDWARD HILL Nelther Luke Glavenich nor Pat E& }GLAVENICH AND EASTLEY FAIL TO HOLD GREAT FALLS AND GIANTS LOSE GAME ] THIS DIAMON lene than @ month, he has caused before the brililance of h ington’ with the craziest line a ball field. |INTERCLASS GAMES | TO BE STAGED AT | UNIVERSITY SOON The games in the interclass series at the university have been an- nounced and the class teams will moet between May 10 and 26 to de cide the winner of The Dally trophy, The underclassmen teams [have been out practicing for some time now and are rapidly getting | into shape for th HEAVY REPORTED WORKING Fred Grant, who tackles Joe Bonds Tuesday night, is said to be getting himself in trim for his melee with the Tacoman. LEAGUE LEADERS CLABH Broadway and Ballard, rivals for first place in the high school league, clash today, Broadway has an edge of one game. COUNTY MEET AT ELMA ELMA, May 5.—The annual Gray's Harbor county scholastic |meet is on here today. OUAL MEET SATURDAY Broadway and Linooln will com- pete in the first dual meet of the season Saturday on Denny field. HAWTHORNE WINS TITLE Hawthorne won the central sec- tion grammar school title by de- |feating Interbay, 6 to 8. Emi! Alex- |son was the winning pitcher. SANDERSON’S PILLS ward to the time when they may tour the continent from coast to const. Barney made the run from Los Angeles to Chicago tn 100 hours’ driving time, altho he and a comrade were on the road 12 days, spending a day at the Grand canyon and another in Kansas City. According to Barney, it is now pos ‘sible to make the jaunt in ten days {The veteran said a vast amount of road work had been completed, and | more is going on, #0 any car can go thru with little trouble. | ors @ie Rickenbacher goes the honor of anys he'll be firet at the finish. His |mount fs a Maxwell car. In his practice spins, which were | not public, Eddie unraveled a speed ceseomeststPientlbasme Almost every red-blooded Amert-|sort of organization. He could see ing his car. This year the race is can kid would Jump at the chance | nothing greater tn all the world for 300 miles " " ne | than his name on the sporting page who was runner-up in all the con to Join Detroit's wrecking ¢rSW |. an author ef an article. He ran|tests of 1915, feels and rub elbows with Tyrus Ray-|nis publination, called Pacifico, in will annex the prize and glory on mond Cobb, yet one of the present/ Frisco. Then he was grabbed by the local cours members of the Bengal slugging the Portland Northwestern league combine had other ambitions until I tie wie tei pi ded four years ago. He preferred the mag ce 2 commonplace career of a sporting| put some one el name where editor, and, what's more, he had a/his was now appearing. So he paper of bis own, until! one day,| ‘Topped bis first ambition and de BLINDFOLDED GOLF RAGE NOW IN SOUTH of 100 miles an hour without push-| and Rickenbacher, | confident he! cided {t was better than for him to | FREE The well known and relia- | ble remedy for FEMALE TROUBLES AND IRREGU. LARITIES, fhe mest $ ‘or #6, mail } wrapper. Hour | 32,1 to 1:80; Sundays, 11 to 1. asks. RAYMOND REMEDY Co. Room 6, Hotel Antiers, 4th & Uston Golf a In bitndfold ts all the rage cided to stick to the national pas. after a sandlot game, in which he ting . in California. The game was re participated, be mpled his name {s/ Hellman was drafted by Detroit, cently tntroduced over a nine-hole the headlines describing a ball|later returned to Frisco, and was Course, and & Wager Was Posted Then he weakened. |recalled this spring. His hitting sey better than 100 would be| Hettr » ¢jhas been aw feature of the Tiger made. i the United Atmateut Press ancncie,|DIAying, and the wrecking crew|The players’ eyes were not uncov- tion around San Francisco, made|BOW consists of Cobb, Crawford, up of amateur editors whose pa pers are official organs of some | TANGLE IN FINALS Mac Pisailon, Portland crack, and Otto Neidofer tangle tonight tn the Last night Neldofer beat Artuur The results High rune—Netdofer $1, Seymour Avernge—Neldofer Charley Hulen. jcrossing the ditches, A 14 dh the! |first hole was the high spot, with| one 18, two 10s and two 8s. Next! Veach and Heilman. HERE IT IS}, Complete Short Sport| of Market Today Speaking of monikers, there's the a or | peculiar case of Mr, Ditto, pitcher, | Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers for | | for the Milwaukee Br 4, and| | Vegetables and Fruit 1] that bird is no mark. es tgeeoae eames eee George Chip le an original cus: as regards training. With a fight/ two nights distant he attended a/°* ¢ baseball banquet and within an| cal temona per erat hour grew from a middleweight to | Cranberries... @ fullledged heavy. ee. eee Boston boasts a rassier entiti Karl Posibil, but {t {sn’t Ifkely will ever become a champ. 10 1-8, Referee at eabbage, Winning- eee The man who sald he could not Judge a ball player’s worth by the size of his pay-check epoke a mouthful of the well known truth, TERWEIGHT MAY | MAKE JAUNT EAST, | Griffiths Senators falled to cop a the orations of Evangelist Billy HE WRITES TO ED) ball game at Boston last season and Sunday, onetime diamond great, | they'll probably be lucky if they em Frank Barrieau, well known Van-| 210" saice that number this year J. Franklin Baker and four other) .ouvar boxer and claimant of the! Yankees have swung their bats on) pacitic Coast welterweight title, is| Ai Seat { Taking his hunch from the mid-| \WE winter preachings of former com trade Eddie Collins and inspired by demon rum. ‘oing to invade,the East this sum-| Johnny Coston thinks he can Not satisfied with his ability to| fer Ty Sister to the sporting (come back. Bryan, Bat Nelson, | gist whale a poor, inoffensive little base-| aitor Harrieau states he has re|Papke and Wolgast has similar | irs ball, the homerun king attended) cived transportation from Harry | hunches, but you can't pinch a gent 1 @ its Sunday's revival at Baltimore and) book and will start from Missoula, | for thinking. ee | hit the sawdust trail so hard hel sont the intter part of the month | ae : carried four pals with him. There| A gent labeled Browser Is touted were 1,000 trail hitters in all, but! 1g @ CRIMINAL nothing more |as the coming distance running | none seemed #0 welcome as thd 418-| thang sick man? Read what “The |champ, With a moniker Ike that | Oregon onions... #2 @ [ty mond stars. |Crime Doctor” has to say in next |the coming champ oughta get over | Yoyiie - te Besides Baker there were Dantel| week's novel-a-week in The Star. lot of ground | Boone, second baseman; Doc Cook, | ™ betcha nen A first baseman; | outfielder; Mullen, | Walters, catcher, and Trainer Du- gan. Boone was first to hit the trafl and Baker, Cook, Mullen and} | Walters soon followed. As the ter-| ror of the pitchers strode down the sawdust aisle with the other Yan-| kee players a cheer was raised, | Pricee Paid Producers for 240 | Eee | Hens, 4 ibs, and ever.. SMOKER TO BE HELD The last smoker of the season Sane and under 1 will be staged at the Young Men's O14 roosters, live | ers, Hebrew clation on May 11 " A size, Gos... 1.00 @ 180 | Turkeys, live " EVERYBODY THOUGHT the ous to 180-10 0 @ young fellow was dead by his own Veal, large = 6 @ 0 hand. But he wasn’t. He was only asleep. “The Crime Doctor” saw) to that. Read about him in The} Star's next novel-a-week | 2” you can’t mellow goodness into either Tobacco or fren’- ship by forcin’—you must let time do the work. } ot fe" . | KNOW THAT Improper | Belling Prices to Retailer foi | Butter, Eggs and Cheese | b aa Hay and Grain paid producer) s for the choicest Kentucky Burley Tobac- co to be matured into VELVET —the smoothest Smoking Tobacco. ss _ = : Leggatt Myers Fobacce Ces It takes two y on oats, 30.00 Timothy . hy ae > _— o_o eel Mixed timothy . 10 & m to 1%, t Wheat ...-+ The total proved to be 84.) er cmild m ered for the stances, but only in|! DOCTOR meat PF wt Between Sprin 169 Washington St. | Near Second Ave. Sohaefer, Arile Latham and Charlie Fa D JESTER 1S CHAMPION “CLOWN” | OF MAJOR LEAGUES Baseball's ripest nut halls from Des Moines, and tho a big leaguer the fame of Nick Altrock, Germany laugh getters extraordinary, 9. The little stranger, Cari cond baseman, Is dally knocking the fane out of comical stuff ever perpetrated on Ho leaps in the air and alights on his head, and every time be turns this trick risks his ni The high dive usually is the off stunt. Then follo a swim ming exhibition, with Sawyer throw- ing bimself on the grass and work- fog his arms and legs like Perry McGillivray doing the “hundred.” This over, the comedian mages an impersonation of a donkey. CJ uses his cap for a tall, swishing it back and forth as he canters about braying loudly and halting occa sionally to lash out with his legs, for all the world like a mule un- dergoing a beating. This perform- ance ts alternated by savage bites at his imaginary tormentor. At a recent game, attended by a band which was planted on the field, Sawyer seized a bat, posed in front of the musicians, and gave an imitation of John Philip Sousa in the role of director. Spearing one of the musicians’ caps, the Jester donned it and paraded around the field, twirling the bat as a drum major does his baton, tossing it in the air and catching it. WASHINGTON STATB LINES UP FOOTBALL GAMES FOR AUTUMN Manager “Pinkey” Walsh of the Gonzaga university football team has announced that be has arranged tentative dates for gridiron contests next fall with the University of Montana and University of Idahe teams. Pyorrhea, May Special By EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. $. Seattle's Leading Dentist 106-713 First Ave. m and Washington Blocks. During the month of May I am going to clean the teeth and ive a full course of ‘orrhea treatment for from $1.00 to $10.00. am also going to make | a'apecial offer of my $38 full upper teeth for dentists lower sets o | tions, e be guaranteed for 15 years. Be careful to come to 706 or 718 First Drug Store. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. 8, 705-718 Firet Ave. Open evenings until § and Sun until 4 for people who work. Phone Main 3640. CLOTHES and the Pinch Back. Opposite 42-Story wit Gus Brown —ABOUT— Penn Brook and Michael Sterns —AT— $15, $18, $20 Into these Clothes go only the finest of tailoring and fabrics, be- cause of their value. There is not a test to which they are not subject- ed, not a probing left undone to de- termine exactly what is in them as « to tailoring, fabrics, color and strength. All models, including Oar stock of Furnishings, Hats and Shoes always complete at our usual popular prices. SECOND AVE. AT YESLER Says —— FOR MEN $25 - L. C. Smith Bldg. ese reels

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