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HE mitt Juan Viola packed S. A. he started something In those placid days which ler's batteries Cuba was just t our great national pastime ar pastimers, resolved to cross th with the athletes employed on At first the fans and the other] players looked upon him askance, | but class told, as it always tells, and soon after he took to rattling | the fences at the Jacksonville park Juan was sold to the Nashville/ Southern association club, only to be laid low with a fractured ankle which sounded taps on his career! in organised ball. . Viola's exploration of the O. B. circuit paved the way for the influx of other tatented Cubans, the game boomed on the isiand, and soon other Cubans, cross- ing into the States, brought @lowing accounts of deeds per- formed daily by their fellow- countrymen. | Each season brought one or more) Dudding stars into the organized! fold, until today there are 14 clever “ players earning good salaries in the major or minor leagues. Only two, however, remained in the big ctr-| eults——Armando Marsans, center fielder of the St. Louis Browns, who working out a wartime contract of $6,500 per season, and Miguel) Gonzales, catcher and first base man of the St. Louis Cardinals Marsans {fs highly educated, hav- fng attended school in New York city, where, at 7 years of age, he ing the Spanish-American war. It that Armando learned baseball He later returned to Havana, and, after playing several season years ago with Rafael Almeida Doth reporting to the New Britain club, Two years later they were sold to the Cincinnat! Reda, Almeida now is with the Mom treal International league club. Two clever pitchers, Emilio Palermo, southpaw, late of the New York Giants, and August Luque, former Boston Brav the ex-government physician? not, why not? He wil! giadiy io a rescribe for int Drug Co. WAGES ON SHIPS: 50c Straight Time 75¢ Overtime WAGES ON DOCKS: 40c Straight Time 60c Overtime Free Board and Lodging. APPLY AT DOCKS or 549 CENTRAL BLDG, SEATTLE Waterfront Employers’ Union To mor you Distri BANS FAST HORNING | INTO NATIONAL GAME; ARE IN MANY LEAGUES BY HAROLD JOHNSON 10 years ago and sailed from Havana for the U. went with his parents to live dur-/ was on the lots of the Big Town! came| back to the United States nine To the Presado Blend Schwabacher Bros. & Co., Ino, his spiked shoes and fielder’s followed the silencing of Wey beginning to see the glories of nd Viola, dean of the Cuban ¢ channel and match his skill the Jacksonville club. } right-hander, are starring this season for the Loulevilie A. A. club, The New York Yankees | last spring tried out Angel Ar | Wolfram in the first frame that agon, second and third base- t Seattle the fray, Wolfram man, but he later wae turned | lasted just one canto and then over to Richmond, Va. |Southpaw Melvor was trotted to The Washington club once car se neal ST alde me Tae! peg by Hen h, play ried Baldomero Acosta and Jacinto], Duis pet by dears oe ie, ules Calvo, outfielders, but both drifted to the minors, Acosta going to Min neapolis and Calvo coming to Van- couver. Washington has Just re-|{e", Tealey Raymond also got op called the former. Another Acosta, bit After thi b a r *. jowever, the Gt first name Jone, ise pite her Ho, ante me a few more but to no too, is with Vancouver Javail, for the locale came baek The Binghamton New York | State league team employs a | member of the Gonzales family | on third base. Manuel Cueto; another Islander, has been on the payroll of the Jacksonville South Atlantic league club. They're all great ball players, possessed of arms of steel, due to the climate in Cuba, where they| play ball all winter, Another year of seasoning, and big league fi will be cheering Jose Rodriguez, according to Mar sans. Jose is learning his leswons now as a member of the New Lon don, Conn, club. Marsans says he's as good as they make ‘em, } NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE }) es \ifirmer grip is required for the A to Show in Seattle (ior ne. Wee ates = 4 wl mannan {thumb out parallel with the press Vancouver » " ing against the handle Team ‘ BY EDWARD HILL "ie you grip the handle with the ‘Geant? 2 Laurence Hall has been offered {seems that it was close enough to| same firmness thruout the whole NATIONAL LmAGi two matches in Seattle Shion the former ge ang iy oe sae ni Pe hr Ege a 4 Von. Pet. . champion another crac! at the) ee stroker a Brookirn {st eeu] The Nobranka bantamwetght,| oon eater only when you swing for the ball. Philadetphia . New York ose) xe “ Chtaage oa 4t¢|appear for local promoters BRONSON AGAIN ieee {{"| Matchmaker Adams of the Elks’) Leo Houck and “Muff” Bronson, Cincinnatt {iiletub offered him a go with Joe\the Portland featherweight, will AMERICAN Gorman, the clevér San Francisco|step into the ring at Bend, Or, — | Beattie Shaw. rf } ° e ° 4 $| | Pepps. rt Altman, | Smmitn Heater. Clark, ” onecccoe™ 1» > 37 32 920010301 ZO1000308 Pappa, Kelly. hit—Cunntny Bacrifice ‘ 7) Altman. | Home run Rayo : ff ft | 6. Umpire BUCK CROUSE LICKS MICKEY KING Buck Crouse, the American mid dleweight whom Les Darcy put out | in jig time not so long ago, re-| | cently won over Mickey King, ac-| | cording to advices from Australia. | |The affair went the scheduled 20 | rounds, with the Yank getting the Howell decision. Mickey King was con | sidered the best lightweight tn | Australia, with the exception of Darcy. All that you've ever read about fragrant | Hall Has Two Offers |; | bantam |116-pounder for him ‘|the neat Austin & Salt show, Slcott tangle in a return bout of alx |Babe Ruth at the plate, and was| 1 ain STAR—WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1916, IN THE PILGRIM DAYS ROGER WILLIAMS TUG Fons Had A HABIT OF STALLING ba WHEN IT CAME CHURCH TIME GREAT FALLS", WINS OVER OUR LADS GREAT FALLS, July 19. # took the only game the Se- attle club has played here this season yesterday, 7 to 6 Despite the fact that the game was a free-hitting affair and that the vi got 15 bingles while Great Falls fell short of that mark,(the Giants never outdistanced the Ele trice from the first Inning until the final frame had been run off It was the hitting in the pinches and the three-run lead nicked off TENNIS FOR BEGINNERS HOW FLORENCE BALLIN PLAYS =e Brick” Eldred to gain the ellck for Seattle in the second chap. with three in the seventh Kansas City Ball Tosser Peddled to Cubs for Big Sum| CHICAGO, July 19. Marty O'Toole has been outdone. . ing to reports here, the National league club has stop Wortman City club for that patd for Wortman ts purchased from the Short- Kansas a price higher than the $22,500 lemon. the best infielder tn} jtbe association In selecting your racquet, gety re Jone weighing about 13 ounces, for NATIONAL RESULTS a heavier one wil! quickly tire the At Chicago 4, Brooklyn 4 |forearm and slow up play, Pay At Cincinnati 6, Boston 4 At St. Louls 5, New York 2 No other. the grip and see that it has a com | fortable handie. If your hands | | however, is dickering for a mill in Portland, and has not yet agreed to| LEO HOUCK FIGHTS Monday night for a 10-round mitt scramble. Houck has already) fought the Portlander two battles of the short #x-round period in| Portland | AUSTIN LOOKS FOR BOY TO MEET O'LEARY Lonnie Austin ts tn San Francis co, looking for some good light) weight to come up in this neck of} the woods and take on Johnny! O'Leary when the Seattle cladiator comes home for a visit to his folks| in September He is signing up several good boxers to show here next winter. here, on August 11, and Dan Salt wanted to get some good to tackle at on July 28, If Hall fails to connect with a bout in the Hose City, he will then probably appear at one of the local mitt-ellnging shows. COULON AND MASCOTT FIGHT NEXT FRIDAY Johnny Coulon and Billy Mas- short rounds Friday night, in Port land. Mascott was awarded the de cision in the Iast setto, but it Verily, It Was Tough Day for Big Leaguers' NEW YORK Fate had'knocked out, while the last battery shuffled the several |man to suffer was Jimmy 19, for July cards teams today with disastrous results, | ping a foul tip dealing the already stricken Yan-| The Dodgers opened up an even kees another blow and cutting down | wider gap on the struggling Nation the batteries of no less than five al league field when they were pre. teams. Pitching in the second Inning of the game against Detrott, Nick Cullop, the Yanks’ most dependable twirler, fell to the ground with a torn ligament, which will keep him| from the game for weeks. to 0. Joe Tinker started a row |which wound up in the game betng forfeited to Brooklyn and the Cubs fined $1,000 The Yankeos, reeling under the last blows of their jinx, succumbed In she same game Ray Caldwell |to the twirling of Willie Mitchell of stopped a hot liner with his knee-|the Tigers, and let the Red and cap, and limped from the field a| White Sox creep closer to the lead cripple, for a few days, at least. | ership. Hank Knocked Cold Donovan's team must ‘face the Wallie Schang, the Athletics’ | strong Western clubs within a week plucky catcher, crashed Into the|minus three of its best pitchers, its grandstand {n pursuit of a foul ball,|two hardest-bitting inflelders and fractured his jawbone, and possibly |at least one of its star outfielders. his skull —_———_ Over in Boston Hank Severold of the St. Louls Browns collided with} A Word to the Weak and Ailing Invite every af- fiicted person, matter whet trouble tm or long It standing, confidential talk with Frank Gotch Breaks Limb in Wrestling Match at Kenosha KENOSHA, Wis, July 19.—Frank form you fully Gotch, heavyweight champion! Henetit you, 1 particulariy wrestler, was being examined here Hiett cases other di e today, following a match last night It was reported ‘that his leg was broken in two different places Gotch has been traveling with a) > cireus | a0- c= ave or f aliments to your ow rove to you IBLIGATION stay cured. I will not accept your jo unleas I can give every honest of QUICK and PERMA 1 of a CURE welfth year in this Green Lake to Have Tennis Tournament Beginning Tuesday Hours: 9 to 11, 12 to 6, 7 to 8 p,m m Keene Cigars is e than realized when smoke them. M KEENE cigar with that & buters, Seattie, Wash oa DR. MACY The public tennis nete at Green Lake will be in shape for play on R11% Second Ave, Epler Bldg. Pussday next. At that. dime he] See eee ee ee Green lake district tennis tourn’ MEN, | KNOW THAT ment 1s scheduled to get under i Improper mi rather th very Permission will be given for ex- clusive use of the courts for the) tournament often long your I treat all DISOR- AMERICAN RESULTS DERS oF At Washington 3, Cleveland 2. um At Boston 4, St, Louis 3 At Philadelphia 2-2, Chicago 9-3 At New York 0, Detroit 4 er @ for reliable Wasserman Blood T USE STAR WANT Archer of G ;| American and one National league | the Cubs, smashing a finger in stop- |sented their game with Chicago, 9 |‘ perspire tape wind as a firm grip cannot be had PAGE 7 the h The second of a series on tennis posed especially for The Seat. tle Star by Miss Florence A. Ballin of Bryn Mawr college, the 1916 | sensation of tennis, hockey and basketball stor.) andle unless the handle is dry Grip the racquet at the extreme against the Giris who grab In game with the right side. left foot. arm. ack Carre > Cal grapetr herrien Raspberries Tomatoes, Ontons, Oniona Ontone, Onions, Native Native creamery, ADS FOR RESULTS" aren | particular attention to the size of|end, resting the palm of the hand the handle half way up never are able to control the ball this may seem awkward, but you'll soon become accustomed to tt eripping ball in and the racquet swinging at your) Study the poaitior your opponent, toss the ball {n the alr, swing the racquet back your head, hitting down hard on the ball and at the same time go- ing forward with the body will end the stroke resting o your per wit * Peppers. bell, tb pie, Florida, er Rhubarb, local Cal, Waent creamery, brick Washingto solid per tb butt for balanced before serving 1b. Sumner, crate Apptes At the forehand | stroke, clowe the hand around the handle with the thumb across. The foot fault is a part of th to be avoided rest the weight on the right foot, In serving, Thus you wil add the weight of your body to the strength of your Be sure you are perfectly | petition last year. Complete Report of Market Today —— oo Prices Paid Wholesale Vegetables and 41mMe 1 m14Ke 1 @ so you with | first A ot over (ML use THis [TW people TAKING AN varruel OLO KETT ROGER Lt RIG& UP a CRUDE CHURCH GOLF GAMES NOW GROW SERIOUS DEL MONTE, Cal., July 19.— With the qualifying rounds and the first round of match play out of the way, the golfers par- ticlpating In the Western Ama teur Golf Champlonship tourna | In all flights wae played, those In the championship flight go- Ing 36 holes, The biggest gallery of the tour nament followed the match be | tween Douglas Grant and Jack Ne ville, both of «hom are conceded to be formidable contenders for the title, A scarcely smaller gal lery watche Heinrich Schmidt, winner of the qualifying round, in F. H. O'Keefe W. Salisbur L R, E. Nix Cop Contest From Russ Hall’s Band of Bengals| Grimes ve. E. Armstrong vs. | Hunter and Sheely “Iron Men” Winners In Fray With Bob’s Vancouver Beavers Letfer and McJannet Frank Rhiel Wins First Place From Sixty at Shoot TACOMA, July 19—Frank ©. Rhiel, Tacoma trapshot, continued to pile up trap honors for himself here yesterday. He nicked 121 out of 126 birds shot at, and headed the ent here got down to the “y whe? - P Oe serious business of the meet. | Last night,” he said with shining eyes, Ing today. The second round | I dreamed that Chance was back; his contest with Kenneth Mon- 7 do tengle, whom he is expected to de | Hit the mitt of Johnny Kling. feat with ease. Bt Other pairings for the flight fol-| “I cheered for Circus Solly low: EK. H. Bankhead vs. DeWitt As he cracked one on the nose; Balch; Harold Lamb vs. G. R.] I saw old Jimmy Sheckard pick Balch; R. D pam ys. J. 8. | A wallop fro ‘ | Worthington; C. E, Mangham 3 bllop trom bis tose; At Tacoma— RW E Spokane bd ekentnus st @ WOLGAST CLAIMS THE TITLE ‘acoma * 1 6 3 y “nero aie A Le There {# a lot of talk the country over concerning the Fourth @® July bout between Champion Freddie Welsh and Ad Wolgast in Dem ver. round for an alleged foul for had been hit low blow was alleged to have been struck. no evidence of a damaging foul. —_— the bout went on until the eleventh, when the referee declared Welsh At Butte— R. H. E. the winner. Vancouver ..... . oS Wolgast, of course, claims that he was jobbed. He is billing him RNS. sop 4s0.0 48% - & 9 8) elf as lightweight champion of the world again. However, his claim Russell, Barham and Cheek; | will hardly be recognized. 7 Floto treated Wolgast fairly. not w He lost his championship to Willie Ritchie on a foul. are is apt to send them home below the belt. fight mer champion. sh. ring and in the best position to judge of what happened. Witt nA ira THE CUB FAN’S DREAM I dreamed that Steiny’s wallop Once more led the old attack; to Joe Tinker make An old-time Tinker spear, And hear J. Evers barking in The shaking umpire’s ear; And like a dream of heaven, Where the feathered angels sing, I heard the shoots of Brownie I seemed see And with the old-time flash of speed, Agility and science, We mauled the Phillies to a pulp And stamped upon the Giants.” He closed his eyes in retrospect, He sighed with joy—and then I kindly shot him thru the heart Before he woke again BM 8M st Wolgast was disqualified by Referee Otto Floto in the eleventh | The bout had been stopped by the referee 19 minutes after the third round, because Welsh claimed that he | a Floto called several physicians into consultation after the first low He says that they could find So Welsh agreed to resume, and Only those who witnessed the bout know whether or not Referee In expressing an opinion when one did see the fight, one must be guided in his belief In either Wolgast And Welsh has the backing of the referee, who was in It Wolgast did hit the Englishman low. His best blows smashes to the body, and tn his excitement the Michigan wildeat is not improbable that There will continue to be a lot of talk about the merits of this It may result in another meeting between Welsh and the fer fiel Mo! 7 all list of those competing in the Pa-| your left hand |cific Indian tournament | Jones Winner Over Former Champion in | champion. There was one upset in the Play- Hajek, winner of the Class B com-| |] followed. “in the Supertor Court, produced evidence of Glandular Remedies a a character that caused . of the secnueny in this oase seems to show, as | Jordan \} far as t is concerned, that any medicine that || over has been administered by Doctor Jordan has | GREATER VINDICATION C-ULO NOT BE A guy named Rickenbach has won the skatt championship, name of the roque champlen still eludes us. R2Q2See sg we have often heard Al McCoy termed the roquefort RM se eS If a professional golfer wine $1,000 a year In prize money, he com |eiders It a wonderful seagon. Can this be why our amateurs object oo strenuously to being classed as pros? Bt ee es A young film actress Is billed as the “American Venus.” day we have lamped almost as many young actresses bill: 8 we have young bali players billed The However, Playfield Tourney jd tennis tournament yesterday.! Icolm Jones trimmed George| fen matches were played off inican Cobbr VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Evidence of Remarkable Cures Was Produced in Court by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies dan was arraigned before the State Medical Boarg and his Doomed to a Crippled Condition for Life by Other Physicians, Absolutely Cured by license to practice dicine reveked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vertisement reproduced, which had been running in the local newspapers, wi untrue, that Doctor Jordan could not cure the diseases mentioned theretn. Doctor Jordan appealed to the courts in the matter and the trial of the case which Judge Walter M. French to rd a decision to Doctor Jordan, restoring to him his Noense. Judge French stated in his decision: READ HIS TESTIMONIAL Boat Tweive rs ago I had tubereuine’ om Beck and under my arma, and the doctors The court cannot find In gut them out for $500, but admitted that It might reawit this case that any credulous Cured me switheut an “operation ced {sane eeseees or {ignorant persons have well ever since (Signed) Ca BOYD, been deceived. On the other 4716 Fourth Ave. North. hand, ¢ witnesses who z have been produced : have been giving practical demonstrat! mert bait a Leda Sore on be my system right here in Seat the past t at Ane ener i" Dector Jordan are hundreds of signed testimonials on file in my written among the best people in the pati whom I have cured, will attest to Ite wond city Profeastonal peopl a »* of Aa Anaemia, Blindness, Chronic Taflammation people of standing in the Biapeten, Proieg os Uterl, Drepas Broclo ipepepsio’ "matio ch i community, people who are known to the Court person- nig Erysipelas, Chronic Gastral| Healt isoase (including Heart Lenk Paralyeis, Locomotor Ataxia, > ally_and people who are Rheumation, Meningitis, Neursisia: Parpiost known to the cttizens of thi Goltre, Btrebtemya Bt Vitus Dane ete eity «enerally being called incerabdle Recases. x meee among the best people tn the c There being a number of Doctors Jordi well i ~~ T don’t think that to bear in mind the full name and address of ry can be contended that Jordan, 619% First Avenue, Seattle. Office hours, Fa. 0 8 they were either credulous p. m.: Bundaye from % p.m. te ¢ p,m. Consultation free Cor or {ignorant except as the spondence selictted. ‘atch each Saturday Star for cures, laity generally is somewhat ignorant of medical matters. There is no contention here that any medicine to involve moral turpitude has been given which is at all harmful. In fact, all pitude on the part Jordan and judgment will, t! DESIRED The Medical Board claimed that these diseases were {nourable, meaning, of course, that they could hot cure them, Doctor Jordan not only claimed to cure them, but produced in court scores of actual- ly cured patients as witnesses for his case. The stories of their remarkable cures have been under oath. Doctor Jorden has caused this statement to be Under all the testimony in this case, I cannot | published in order to acquaint the public and his ‘ind that the adveriisement is so grossly untrue as many friends with the proven facts in the case. Dr. Jordan is now located on Second Floor of the Mutual Life Building, First and Yesler. ¥ tended to benefit the patient. There is no contention on the part of the State, and it so stated by counsel for the State, that there was anything in this advertisement thet was {njurtons to puflic morals. fw that it gets Gown to whether or not this ad- erUsement i» so grossly untrue as to involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan,