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MUTT AND JEFF—ONLY A DIFFERENCE OF ONE WORD KEPT JEFF FROM T AKING THE COUNT THE REASON YoU LOST Your Nerve YESTERDAY WHEN You WENT To PROPOSE Te Miss smite war You Had a LONG FLOWERY an MORIZED. You [-—— YUP, my Name ig. OTHELLO MonTG omen TEPPRIES AND THE BRIDES ame 15 SARMING SMITH, RUSN or PLEASE TIM A MAN OF | ACTION AnD Few worps WEDDING RING AND PRomee PLAY GREAT | BILL ROSE MAY GO IN TRADE TO) 83 GaME MONTANA OUTFIT rinse gaan ta | |HI SCHOOLERS | lege games, the Franklin and || Queen Anne high schoo! teams } battled to i iT «: BY EDWARD HILL | any as Bokiew abet RESIDENT DUGDALE, of the Seattle Giants, this} What little edge could be given|- morning received a communication from Herb Hester,'!™ the play should be credited to/ “aad the Franklin team. They fought| manager of the Great Falls club, offering the local mogul their heavier opponents to a stand-| the choice of three players on the Great Falls club in ex- still, and whenever the hill schoo! change for Pat Eastley or Bill Rose, Seattle pitchers fee aed to score, their line held It appears that Bill Rose will be the player offered by scnoo aye ll Sebadoh F yer ols could not be pierced for Dug. Bill has stated that he wants to get away from Seattle. |gains when a few yards meant a He said he would not play ball next season unless it was | possible touchdown. ! with some other team. Franklin had the best chance for ® touchdown when Richardson took At present a deal is pending between Tacoma and Seattle the ball down the field for a 35-yard and Rose is included in this. If it falls thru he will be the |run. He fumbled when tackled, and one offered to Great Falls by the local management Queen Anne recovered the ball on LEARD NOW IN CALIFOR PP eeineal ot IN 1 NIA Johnny Parsons Out | Townsend of Franklin outpunted sae UP MATERIAL nae Cosper of the Quay team by a big Leard, new skipper of the! margin. Giants, is in Southern California at} Of Work at Oregon! the present writing, and sends word |_A train of engine and two pas- senger cars that recently fell thru a bridge in Oklahoma ts sinking) that he has his eye on several likely looking future Giants. He a Pony le rag cuttielden oy | Parsons is not taking part in scrim- from aight in a quicksand bed. A the name of Devine, whom he says | ™4s® with the U. of O. gridiron | like accident in the same state in| fs a wizard at the national pastime. *U84. He was injured recently, but |1908 caused the death of 70 passen- | is expected to be in the lineup when |gers in a car that was engulfed so) PAT EASTLEY SPENDING WINTER IN PORTLAND Pat Eastley, Giant pitcher, Is ling the winter in Portiand. has @ good job in the Rose y which he goes back to when) the wintry winds begin to buzz. Altho no longer playing in Portland, | Pat is still very popular with the fans. that Is seldom displayed in col- EUGENE, Or, Oct. 9.—Johnny [the local institution clashes with | rapidly they had no chance to make! | California. their escape. | Peld Producers for ad Prices Feild Whotersste Dealers ter JOE BAYLEY WOULD } Poultry, Veal and Fork di Vowetabiee sed’ Prait FIGHT WOLGAST | crrentea Gaity by J. W. Goal Joe Bayley, citizen of Victoria, | 1914 drovers <a ot os . C., and the eccentric Reuben | Decks fat - rereree the island town, dropped into | Hess, 2 ibs and Beatle Friday to see Chet Neff and | fens. * ies *nd, "au, land. bane. | Cal. lemons, per crate | Carrot, local... Casaras, ID. " Cucumbers, hothouse Rex plans eee and still claims the € lightweight title, was clamor- for a bout with the former | Perk. svcd “L can beat Wolgast in tour|f em Tounds as sure as the sun rises | @. and sets,” he declared. ) EODIE QUINN WILL NOT MEET GEORGE ROSS Eddie Quinn, the Tacoma bantam, who was scheduled to meet George Ross of Vancouver in one of the im! les to the Lee Johnson- Anderson fight, to be staged | Limmuretr, ici, night in Dreamland, has! wisconsin trtpiets scratched from the card.| Wisconsin twine | Zens amore | | metect ranch . nee Fresh Bastern ogee... lapeit storage . - Win City Series || ST. LOUIS, Oct. 9.—The Browns |funer both games of a double bill | ruet sound 0 y and the city title by defeat- pert the Cards, 2 to 2 and 4 to 1 Plank and Bobby Groom put the wins for Fielder Jones’ ag- ec ec Netive Wasrhingtoe ereamery, cube Native Wasntngtes creamery, brick ; Storage. cubes Storage, bricks Domestic wheel hee Gravenstein cooking apples Jeftens Country Way end Groin (Prices paid producer) 17.00 2900 33.90 33.00 Dnlons, yelle Onions. ere Walla Walle Mixed timothy 1.1900 | white river .. astern Washington dou- Yakima Gems . bie compressed timothy — | Sweet potatons Wheat a | sOtt market tem) The Talk Highways of the Land Millions of miles of Bell Telephone wire at your beck and call. When you’ve got to have quick action, re- member that a word to the operator will clear the track, two miles or two thousand, day or night. Prompt, reliable and decisive! Consult the list of toll rates to cities hereabouts; it’s in the front of your Bell directory. “Ask for Pacific Long Distance” THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE STAR—MONDAY, OCT. 9, Now I™% ace SET. WLU 6o RIGHY WeR AND PRofese, WELL BE manned BY 6 OcLOcK Year, Club. 1900—Chic: ‘ 1901—-Chicago .. 1902—Philadeiphia 1903—Boston ... .. 1904——Boston : 1905—Philadeiphia 1906—Chicago 1907—Detroit . 1916, PAGE ) MISS SMITH, Pew woros WILL You MARRY ME ? Y¥ Club. 1908—Detroit ..... 1909-—Detroit .. 1910—-Philadeiphia 1911—Philadelphia 1912—-Boston 9 AMERICAN LEAGUE CHAMPS IN PAST | SHOOTE RS IN AND TAM A woman WorDs \ Red Sox Skipper’s Smile and Some of His Trusties Henriksen (Copyright, 1916 ‘Trede Mark Nee by MC. Fisher, U. # Pat. Office) BY BUD FISHER. 93 s OF Frew You'll Like the Originality of Our Haberdashery Displays PUT MAN ON GRIDIRON TO JUDGE HIM, SAYS YOST! } “In Football or Life the Hearts, Not the Hands, Succeed,” Declares Veteran Coach of Michigan FINE TRIM SUNDAY Good weather was the signal for the trapshooters to turn out Sunday, and many did at Harbor island traps. A feature BY FIELDING H, YOST In the game of football or of life, it isn’t the hands or the which succeed, It's the heart! If you want to judge a man, put him in a footl game, I read men by football. It is my work and pleasure. A youth on a football field is just like a hero a motion picture, whose every movement forms tht basis of a drama, When I take candidates for a football team coach them, I am preparing them for the gridiron for real life. Real character surges thru the artificial with which they are hidden when men find selves on the football field. We live our lives but once, and football for he biggest incident in the careers of many men. I can watch a boy on the gridiron three years tell you what kind of a man he will make. & Ty Cobb would have been just as great a foo paerh eames peoniten, Of (8 Pe player. The desire and ability to be great—the | clfie Northwest association, the £0¥-| determination, physical and moral courage—would have carried jerning body of the Northwestern | thra just the same, Any of our great men would have succeeded on fl amateur sports, at Saturday's meet: | football field. ing in Portland. H J. Campbell of | 1 have seen heart dramas enacted on the ribboned field of Spokane was chosen vice president wnich would have been considered masterpieces of fiction. I have and T. Morris Dunne secretary | comedies, tragedies and the thing between. \sephccpee a ae I have seen men find themselves on the football field. I have | weaklings suddenly grow strong—have seen boastful men lose fi ; * . Beacon Hill Pool Is airs of bravado and become cowards in a twinkling—their real Besieged by Anglers, acters coming to the front. No matter how great an actor a man is, he cannot conceal his f | ‘The Beacon hill poo! was besieged |by fly and bait casters yesterday. | character all the time. Sham and hypocrisy are absent from the ball field, When you see a man in a game you see him just as he strong or weak, noble or ignoble. Some of the best scores of the sea. It's & great thing—this football! fon were hung up on a day which was ideal for the sport In the distance ° . |fly casting Hayes was first with <3 Celtic Soccerites feet; in the bait casting for distance | Monette won, casting 168 feet. 0: and C. E. McKel- four breaking 20 straight in one event. McKeivey aleo went thru the 50 bird event, winging 49 out of the 50 shot at. In shooting at 100 he} e 97. 1. H. Retd was recond | |with 96. Jack Lewis, a beginner,| |got away to @ nice start his first) | tir yut by cracking 64 out of a} possible 100, ‘Goldsmith Re-elected | ito P. N. A. Presidency | A. 8. Goldsmith of Seattle was} | a | Burnside Hatters to Hold a Meeting) _Victors at Tacor A meeting of the Celtic soccer) TACOMA, Oct. 9—The Bu football club will be held Tuesday | Hatters of Seattle trimmed the Pennsylvania will plant black night at 8 at 411 Pike st. All pla: - | coma Smelter team, Tacoma cherry trees in the state reserves|/ers and boosters are earnestly re-| champs, Sunday in a double bill, to provide food for birds ' quested to be present to 1 and 1 to 0. . i VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to. |} Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Evidence of Remarkable fj Cures Was Produced in Court # by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies dan was arraigned before the State Medical Board and his license to practice medicine Doomed to a Crippled Condition for Life by Other Physicians, Absolutely Cured by revoked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vertisement reproduced, which had been running the local newspapers, untrue, that Doctor Jordan could not cure the diseases mentioned therein. Doctor Jordan appealed to the courts in the matter and the trial of the case which fellowed, in the Superior Court, produced evidence of a character that caused Judge Walter M. French to award a decision to Doctor Jordan, restoring to him his license. Judge French stated in his decision: The court cannot find tn this case that any credulous or ignorant persons have been deceived. On the other hand, the witnesses who have been producéd on be- half of Doctor Jordan are among the best people in the efty. Professional people, people of standing in the community, people who are known to the Court person- ra ally and people who are R atism, Meningitis, Neuralgia, Paralyeis, Spinal Curvature, known to the citizens of this Goltre, Strabismus, St. Vitus’ Dance and most of the other so- city generally as being called incurable diseases, among the best people in the city, And I don't think that it can be contended that they were either credulous ignorayt except as the y generally is somewhat ignorant of medical matters. READ HIS TESTIMONIAL Seattle, Nov. 1, 1914. Twelve years ago I had tubercular abscesses on my neck and under may erme, 9 the doctors here offered to cut them out for $500, but admitted that it might result in crippling my arm for 1 Doctor J, Eugene Jordan cured me without a: jon, and I have remained well ever since, (Signed) cB BOYD, 2714 Fourth Ave. North. I have been giving practical demonstrations of the merits of my system right here in Seattle for the past thirty years, and f signed testimontals on file in my office, written by 3 whom I have cured, will attest to its wonders. ft the Auditory ralysis 0! Diabetes, Chronic Dyspepsia, a 2 ra 1 re being a number of Doctors Jordan tn Seattl in mind the full name and address of Docto: 4 First Avenue, Seattle. Office hours, undays from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m, Consultation fr Watch each Saturday Star for remarkable ft ts well J. p.m; spondence solicited. cures, Shorten WALKS 100 MILES TO GET SELF ARRESTED There is no contention here that any medicine has been given which is at all harmful. Im fact, all of the testimony in this case seems to show, as far as that 1s concerned, that any medicine that ever has been administered by Doctor Jordan bas (ended to benefit the patient, There is no contention on the part of the State, and ft so stated by counsel for the State, that here was anything In this advertisement that was irloe to public morals. So that & gets Cown to whether or not this ad- vytisement is so grossly untrue as to involve oral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan, Under all the testimony tn this case, I cannot to involve moral turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan and judgment will, therefore, be for Doctor Jordan GREATER VINDICATION COULD NOT BE DESIRED The Medical Board claimed that these diseases were incurable, meaning, of course, that they could not 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 stated under oath, Doctor Jorden has caused this statement te be published in order to acquaint the public and his many friends with the proven facts in the case, CHARLESTON, W. Va, Oct. 9.--Declaring that he had robbed ind that the adverdsement is so grossly untrue as the postoffice at Slab Fork in 1914, but now wanted to pay the penalty, Charles Kunico, aged 20, surrendered himself to the local federal au- thorities. He declared that hp decided to give himself up after dream- ing that he had been arrested. He said he walked more than 100 miles thru the mountains in order to reach Charleston. AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Dr. Jordan is now located on Second Floor of the Mutual Life Building, First and Yesler.