The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 11, 1916, Page 7

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PORTLAND CLUB WOULD COME TO THEN.W. LEAGUE BY EDWARD HILL ON’T be surprised this winter when you hear a lot of talk about Portland coming into the Northwestern e. Portland is wanted in this league just about as bad as it would like to get into it. The powers that be in the Rose City begin to see where they would have been better off had they never deserted this circuit for the AA league. The Northwestern league is be- ginnung to think that it would be a lot better off at the present time had Portland not been allowed to jump the traces. A meeting has been called of Coast league moguls at which the salary limit and other things will be gone into. At this session it is not at all improbable that ‘Frank Chanca pilot of the Los Angeles club, will have considerable to say about dropping Portland from the circuit. Frank has made two trips north this season and each time ran into a rainy session that caused him to drop a couple of chunks of kale in the four figures. He isn't over it yet. PORTLAND VOTED OUT today that the Killilays, Jack and/| OF LEAGUE BEFORE Martin, pitcher and outfielder, have Last year Portland was yoted out /5een swept out of their jobs, as of the Coast league, 5 to 1, The well as Outflelder Bankhead, Harry only dissenting vote was that cast McArdle, infielder, Jimmy Kelly, tn | by Judge McCredie, the Portland |felMer. and Rube Williams and Jim owner. At that time the cind wns | Spaulding, pitchers, have been paying out more for railroad fare |"isned for trials, than it was taking in at the gate.) maNoUK WHIFFS 14 IN ‘The railroad, however, made —— BUSH LEAGUE GAME Fate this eeasca, and Portlan Herb Manouk, who was on the % out again. |Seattle and Vancouver pitching McC! 1 A BIT LEARY |staffs a while this season, writes oF cone JUMP jfrom Princeton, B. C, that he The McCredies are just a pit |{Wirled the second game of a double teary of making the jump. They | >!!! Sunday, blanking Oroville, 2 to fear the fans will not take kindly |% and whiffing 14 batters, to class B ball after seeing the AA| Herb has a lot of stuff, but has brand. This could eastly be reme-|2% had the needed experience, and died, however. Should Portland |! ® bit off on control as yet. He) come into this ctrontt, the mag-| Will be heard from later. Rates aro nearly all unanimous for otien vanes IN MONTANA making !t an A league. ES YESTERDAY Gotng, base- There was nothing . yesterday tn “Mprenthent Dugdale of the Seattle dallically speaking, Montana. Vancouver and Seattle @lud ts one of those who favors the to this cireutt left here Sunday night. The Beav- ers were headed for Great Falls and the Gtants for Butte. The local @ classification | When the talk) | club will pastime the reruainder of the week at Butte, thon hop over to Great Falls for half a week, and *ithen hop back home. VANCOUVER AND SEATTLE ;|LEAGUE CLOSES The VancouverSeattle league has been brought to a close. Those teams played together so much the last couple of months that they be fan to get real chummy. All that is past now, however, for the two > gala sec lama DAVE HILLYARD LEADS HOME RUN HITTERS Leaders in home runs: Dave Hillyard, Butte, 11; Johnson, Butte. and Renther, Spokane, 5; Bill Leard, Tacom: erts, Butte, 4; Sheely, Kenneth Williams, bee, Bankhead, Roy Grover, Sheehan, Eldred and Brinker, 2. jOWLY’ A QUESTION OF A_LITTLE TIME is only a question of time until Hand will be tn this league, and aR CLEANING UNDER \YAT GREAT FALLS Herb Hester has taken a balf- on the old broom, and house ‘x is under way at Great Word comes over the wire When Title Insur- ance was in its Infancy the New York Mail Made the following observation: “The delay in closing transactions, the risk of Sooner or later, and is one with which every golf club | has to deal. } solved at all. | Some of the larger clubs. report | : error in researches, the [/little trouble with their caddies; | se i ved i . [| most of the smaller ° ss were’ -gaicipect wpe nothing but trouble, and rightfully to “heel” a found . aminations and the want |) nave only themselves to blame. of a substantial guaran- tee for losses by una- voidable errors, have all We know of one club, for in stance, at which the members have unwittingly helped to turn a group of fairly good boys into a been serious drawbacks |) veritable band of pirates by tgnor- to real estate invest- ing the request of the club offi- 1 ments. * * * The diffi- }{ctals not to buy balls offered for sale on the course. | On this particular links lost balls cult question seems likely to meet with a solution in the shape of the in- troduction of real estate title insurance.” —— How Fully Title In- surance has met its ex- pectations is evidenced by the fact that in New York City, as else- where, the change has deen complete—the ab- stract being no longer used. The same change is taking place in Seattle. The old abstract of title is being steadily shoved off the board by the modern, safe and satis- factory policy of Title Insurance. (Corrected 4i ly by J. W. Godwin & Co.) Apricots, Cal. * 115 oo Clark Seedlings . jariie, new rapes ° Grapes, seediens Honey, new, case Prac yee | Peppers, bell, Ib Pireappis, Florida, Radishes Raspberries, Sumner, crate Washington Title Insurance 1.00 Auctration, 4 Company | 22 22." & Walla, dow . oid BI6 SECOND AVE |W “ita EASY WAY To Get A TAN WITHOUT TAKING A VACATION « ‘COBB AGAIN THREATENS TO QUIT CHICAGO, July 11.—Accord- Ing to friends close to Ty Cobb, the Detroit star is contemplat- Ing quitting the game. Jeers of the fane who formerly cheered him have gotten en hie nerves. That he hae in mind this move ls well known to his team- mates, and in addition he has 00 expressed himeeif to at | one Chicago player. In Bt. Louts recently he gave out longer tole: multitud all o' riding him, WASHINGTON, July 11- absurd,” said Manager of co Jennings, when rumor that Ty Cobb had decided to jump the doubles elab. ver the and. he lan interview saying he would no ¢ the hootings of the be knows there is no way of stopping the fans saying what they please, it is believed he had retirement in mind “We would not be surprised any jday to hear that Ty had gone back | South,” remarked one of the Detroit players the other day. “The fans eircult have been TY sWON'T QUIT urse, baseball. PLAYING TENNIS LONDON King Ma tennis o ma) asked about July 11.—Former 1@t Portugal, who has been winning new titles on ourtge sprained his ankle while bigetag in a mixed Me at the Queen He was carried off, suf- fering intense pain. is growing Ho never could stand crit- “Tt is, the Well, Anyway, This Club Stuck Past the 4th of July BURLINGTON, ita place Ia, July in the Central 1 Well, anyway, this city managed to 8 \efation until July 4 had been safely tucked Into the discard. That was about all, however, as arrangements are now being made to transfer the franchise to Ottumwa. Tono Wins Contest From Oakville Lads CENTRALIA, July 11.—Tono de- Mon ing for Tono. much sooner, the caddie problem | the tees balls should peymaker, injured have developed ts are Thieving Among Caddies Pays Better Than Work BY COLONEL BOGEY usually to carry over the rough in front of That searching for these and Skipper Rob-|feated Oakville Sunday at baseball, Dan Murray and/13 to 6. Spokane, and Pappa, 3; |out with Seattle in the #pring and|the front and by trouncing Conrad) McGinnis, Big-| was recently Les |here, was back in the lineup, catch- who tried} in a game into |8o prolific a source of income that Frequently it is solv-|the worst fs not at all surpris- ng. Putting a Premium on Thievery But when it ball into becomes the com the dirt, and then to abstract it later and offer it for sale to the next group of players passing that way, the question does become one that | no club can decently ignore not only to better treatment, but the themselves should not be permit- ed to develop a fondness for this class of petty thie are a common penalty for slicing and stealing bal’ or pulling into the long grass bor-| profttable dering the fairways, or for failing | course. MARKET REPORT White Yai x pring 1918 b Veal, Veal, Limbui Wisc Select |r | btrmw | tim uM | Oregon triplets river per Ib. ee rollers: 18 to 12 large .. Old roogters, lve Pork, good block Ketina Burbanies ima Game hogs.... .09 Butter, Rage and Cheese Native Wash creamery, Native W in ernment, 906 pas hese Domestic wheet .. reer .. in triple’ in twine 03% | Young America . ranch @ Batter ingt ern Washington o et nound oats ton ee timothy and Grain producer) le becom: business on this Gelling Prices to Retailer for For |in is the member entitled jade ry. Finding 80 frequently | mle’ | proved fatal in Doyle's case and ed satisfactorily to the members, lined with disengaged caddies and|iiony way he lost to Davia in the! the caddies and the caddies’ par- older boys eager to join a search ents. More frequently it is ead F the clubs have|mon practice for these young med |or winning he h | | | | | | -——_— Prices Paid Producers for Eggs, Poultry, Veal and Fork ; en, POD WN DD 7) * * BY HAROLD JOHNSON California, noted for its sunshine, | oranges and tennis phenome, has produced another wizard with the racquet—Willis BE. Davis, whose dynamic America's clay courts. 1 A little stranger to tho spotlight) of tennisdom prior to last spring, | the lanky native son who repre- sents the University of Pennsyl- vania when pastiming at the net) has literally hammered his way to/ Doyle, Washington, D. C, in the} national classic at Cleveland an-| uexed the title which R. Norris} Williams failed to defend. Playing in-and-out tennis in the earlier rounds, Davis fought to the finals, favored by the gallery be cause of bis dazzling tactica, His every move smacked of the spec tacular. Some likened him to the Ty Cobb of the courts, so fiery was the Californian’s driving. There were those in the stands, however, who strung with Doyle who played cool, calculating conservative tennis and who w the dop when he = elimin: George Church. The spirit | | | of clfivairy really! championship round because he had exhausted himself in a mixed doubles match staged prior to the big event. The title Davis, 6-2, 7-5 and immediately aft-| tened to Buffalo to engage in another championship melee. | Wearing a grin thruout his matches, Davis is the coolest prop- osition we have seen on the courts many moons. At times his drives traveled with such velocgy as to almost knock the racquet out of Doyle's hand as Davis stood in side the line, sloughing the ball to} 1 Go East This Summer ‘Norther Pacific Ry } Thru the interesting gnid resource- ful Northwest, Stop at Yellowstone Park Original and Greatest National Park Low round trip tickets on sale daily. Travel Northern Pacific and get additional scenery and service at no additional expense. Beet dising car service in the F sang’ v 1, Minn: Tell your westbound : A.D. CHARLTON A.G.PLA Portland, Ore. STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1916. PAGE 7. New Tennis Champ Hits "Em Where They Ain’t passed to | PSE i i= x AAAAEP LS. Wi SNES WMILILI LILLIES ENN ESS AAPG LLL ALLL LLL, Nx we abba INNIS PRIS LLL LLL Sa oe Potro PLES SSE LSS .. ROLES ESS LISS SS LIL LLL LLL LS ENE DRPILL ELA LIL LL RAS * all angles. | Davis played thruout the tourney | without a sunbonnet, but the sua nearly got his goat in the titio) style of play has made | series and after Doyle had won the |¢al of 5.696 persons chased the elu- him monarch of all he surveys on/first three games of the second | give white pellet over the greens in set the coast wizard excused him- self and returned with a duck bon- net of uncertain cleanliness. NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE Won. Lest. match, and he ts confident of draw ing down the 10,000 fron men bout will draw a § most beaten heavyweight alive, is the fans will vee # great fight, for both men can hit hard and asstmi late punishment, them any gamer. Dillon manages to string along on $1,500 and 100 purses! What's the answer? Old Stockade May MORAN WANTS $10,000 TO FJGHT NEW YORK, July 11.—Frank Moran demands $10,000 to fight Carl Morris at Tulsa, Okla, the latter part of this month. The promoters have guaranteed him $7,500. Thru his manager, Ike Dorgan, the Titian-haired Pitte- burger is sticking out for the $2,500 extra. Dorgan expects to clinch the The 5,000 gate. Morris, next to Jim Flynn the reat attraction in the Middle West. He ix as popular out there jas the dear Dodgers are in Brook lyn. The Moran-Morris affair will be over the 10-round trail. Beaten to pulp by the white Wal. cott in the person of Jack Dillon, | Moran goes right along getting reg ular dough for his services. all, there must manager, or else the Tulso people haven't learned of Frank's most re- cent defeat, After be something in a If Moran gets in half-way shape They never made It is beyond us. COULON AND BILL TO TANGLE AGAIN PORTLAND, Or July 11 Johnny Coulon, ex-champion ban-| tamweight pugilist, who has been hanging around Portland ever since July 3, when he was defeated by Billy Mascott, got what he wanted today. It is w return match with Mase The bout, six short t | rounds, will be staged at the Rose!“ City club, next Tuesday night. Be Transformed to Second Golf Links Increased interest {n municipal golf links may mean the transform- ing of the old stockade, on Beacon hill, into a second city links, Last month was the largest the Jeffer- @on park links has enjoyed. A to- June. Butte Cops Fourth Straight Win From Frisky Redskins At Butte— 2 Eo Spokane eee evecce 8 0 8 Butte e, o''V6 Evans and Sheely; Hendrix, M Ginnity and Hoffman. © Th * | . “a “St | Billings Still Has { Butt a es! 1 * ool ss | Hopes of Horning | seat Bou Into N. W. Circuit! seattle 3 4 nto N. W. Circuit NATIONAL LEAGUE BILLINGS, Mont., July 11.—This wap ‘ost Pet loity has not yet given up hopes of as 30 securing a baseball franchise in the 36 oe Northwestern league. If not this! + ae «4 ° | season, then perhaps next year. A Ty rT mass meeting was held recently,/ # 3 and already workere are getting the) 6 Raa necessary $6,000 to put a club here. | AMERICAN LEAGUE ae ee Won. +a 40 St. Louis Philadel phi Vernon San Francieco om Angelos Portland eovegee Sait Lake Clty sesees.s Oakland AMERICAN RESULTS ¢ At Boston 0.0, Chicago 43. At New York 2, Cleveland No others. MEN, | KNOW THAT re very of your long standing trouble blood disor- dere 10¢ and 20¢ Monday Matinee, 2:30 Beginnin, Ene Noted Diva Madame Jeanne Jomelli ALACE HIP Matinees 10c Any Sent Feature Becond at Spring Evenings 15c and Sun, ote. ney Gilm TOM MINSTRELS Other Vaudeville and Photoplay. Mats. 1:10 to 5, Nights, 6:20 to 11, Tongiht—“Irish Night Grvahroeum Nights 8120 Port Orchard Team | ~ Takes a One-Sided | Sunday Ball Game! PORT ORCHARD, July 11.—In a game that was too one-sided to be interesting, Port Orchard defeated the Hibernians Sunday, 10 to 0. Gordon held the visitors to three hite, while the local #tickers pound ed out 10 on the delivery of Hin-| chey, who is not altogether to be blamed,, however, as his support was very wabbly in the pinches. Coast Amateur Mitt Flingers May Sling | Gloves in Tourneys| LOS ANGELDS, July 11—Ama-| teur athletic clubs in Portland, Se- attle, Spokane, San Francisco and, this city have nearly completed ar | rangements for the staging of a se- ries of boxing tournaments. There is some doubt about Spokane and Seattle, but the three Southern cities will hold the meets without them if they do not come tn. Great Alexander Is_ | Slipping; Maybe Not, | But He Loses 3 in 7 Is Alexander the Great going back, or fs Pat Moran, bent on landing another pennant, pitching his wonder slabbist too often? In | seven days the speckled Nebras- kan has hurled three games and lost them all. Foston, with Barnes on the peak beat Alex, 3 to 0, June 27, polling | six hits in the seven innings the latter worked, New York walloped him June 30 and drove him from the box in five rounds on seven hits and four runs. Robertson nicked him for a homer and double. Boston again trounced Alex July 8, gathering five runs in six in- nings, and making eight hits, NAT <7 o aaa At St. Louis Philadelphia 5, At Pittsburg 7, New York 1. At Chicago 0, Boston 4 At Cincinnati 6, Brooklyn 3, | championship of California 13 years JERRY AND FRANCIS AND CHICK (The eternal triangle rules the world.) Evers and Tinker and Chance Formed quite a trio o The deeds of McInnis and Collins Jaker have often been told. Jackson and Speaker and Cobb Rule in their game with the stick— Golf owns the sway of the all-around play Of Jerry and Francis and Chick! And Jerry is Travers, you k Francis is Ouimet the great; Chick is the new open champ Evans, who triumphed o'er fate. Jackson and Speaker and Cobb Rule in their game with the stick— y’ of the all-around play, Of Jerry and Francis and Chick! Golf owns the sw of them called the having 4 little argument, on the question under discussion. satisfactory?” The Waiter consulted the manag when the bet was decided! The manager he could help gettle it, he suggested. negatively. “Time alone can decide our wager,” said the one who acted as — jepokesman. “I have bet my friend that bottle of wine you just served — Smith building falls it will fall to the north, that when the L. C says it will fall to the south.” sm as 8 If Jack Dillon can hold his present form, he may yet be signed te - umpire in the Northwestern league. 3 tt 4 The loud cheering you heard the other night, Rudolph, was of old; now, bd TRY THIS IN THE THALIA SOME EVE Two sporting men were seated in a Seattle cafe recently. were drinking grape and engaged in a heated argument. Finally one aiter over to the table. he said. “We have bet a bottle of grape We want you to serve it now the loser will pay as soon as we get @ decision on the matter, Is that Certainly, the loser could pay, The grape was served grew curious as to the nature of the bet, Both men shook their er, 3 see that Cobb threatens to quit baseball,” said Charley Holem ich one, Ty of Irvin?” asked Chet McIntyre. They “My friend and I are 4 white heavyweighte applauding the announcement of the be dem mission that they will be suffered to mingle with Messrs, MeVey, Wills, Jeannette and other gentlemen of color. 2s THE LOSS OF FRANK GILHOOLEY The loss of Frank Gilhooley at this time is a severe blow to Yet there is no reason for believing that it will prove fat Yankees to the club's pennant hopes. Gilhooley has been playing good ball. running the bases brilliantly and fielding satisfactorily, uable ball player. However, the Yanks managed to move to the front without receive ing much ald from Lee Magee, Frank Baker and Ray Caldwell. these three are going at full speed. They should be able to hold the — club up with Gilhooley out of the cast. The accident to the diminutive outfielder is unfortunate, but there is no cause for alarm. Might we make so bold as to suggest that among those not in of the plan to distribute free score cards at all ball parks is Eddie Gleason? % Fashion Note: younger set. Bs 8 Koji Yamada has gone back to Japan, but as long as George Sutton | lives, Willie Hoppe will never want for a partner. 2 DILLON ves. FITZ I have seen Jack Dillon referred to as the greatest piece of fighting machinery for his weight that ever lived. Do you believe that | Dillon at 169 pounds had anything on Bob Fitzsimmons at 158 po | Or is Dillon a greater piece fighting machinery, pound for pound, than the late Stanley Sir: when he knocked out Jim Corbett? % & 8 Dillon is the Red. As for Dillon arena in the country. s If Dillon and Willard are matched, why not let Dillon fight from @ Or permit him the use of a springboard far platform raised three feet? each running start? 3 8 THE MAIN QUERY I can tell you the future of Europe's map, But who's going to win that A. L, scrap % Boston pitchers have been accused of using the bean ball. | there are those who say there is nothing in a diet. JOHN BARLEYCORN COUNTS HIM OUT STOCKTON, Cal, July’ 11.—Mar- tin Canole, the lightweight pugilist, who fought Jimmy Britt for the ago, !s walking East over the ties today Arrested on a vagrancy charge, he said to Police Judge Tye: “I came to California in a Pull- man, but I'm walking back over the ties. I could not stay in the ring with old John Barleycorn, judge.” Judge Tye recognized Canole, de- spite the latter's bushy whiskers and tattered clothes. He asked the prisoner if he was the former Mar- tin Canole. “All that's left of him,” was the reply, aR Res « Sunburn is being worn by the more careless of the grand entry for his weight, but he hi | Fitz had at his best, nor the exquisite skill and generalship of Robert and Ketchel, that match today would pack oe would be nothing like it, pound for a 8 He has been hitting 4 He is a ‘3 ws aio OUTSIDER, & 't the punth that LFS Taipale, Finnish Discus Killed in Big War Willie Kolehmainen, famous the for the pale, who Finland events at the Stockholm Olympics four years ago, met death in the European war several weeks ago, Taipale sians. athletes who have fought and died for their countries in the great conflict om the other side. Champion, brother of Hannes, is authority atement that A. R. Tal- | scored five points for in winning doth discus wi fighting for the Rus He is one of many WHATS THE MATTE! WHO'S O£AD the Real Tobacco Chew, sew you hear men boosting to their friends, You'll be glad, too, ET the taste of the richest tobacco cut, apr ag 4 CUT ing shred. It is the you've found it and to pass the word along to men that you keow, “Notice how the salt brings out the rich tobacce taste” ‘WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, SO Unica S “how that New York

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