The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 12, 1916, Page 9

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| HELLO, mu ry, Wwe ,t Propecen MARRIAGE To DID SHE AccePr? } = i{_ No Se) |} To.D ME | SOMETHING \ t Dipw'r \Know BEFORE STAR—THURSDAY, SHE TOLD me SHE'S | ALREADY L MARRIED oct. ) more JACK ALLEN DUE TO ARRIVE HERE TONIGHT FOR GO BY EDWARD HILL ACK ALLE J the slugging Portland lightweight who is called the “stockyards demon” in the city of roses, is ex- pected in town tonight to be on hand for his melee with Nick! Sugar tomorrow night at Dreamland. / While this go is a preliminary event, it is attracting con-| 12, 1916. (Copyright, ¥ ‘Trade Mark AND FUR THER- ) HER. HUSBAND CAME IN, WALKER SLIDES INTO THIRD ON FIRST HIT OF THE GAME; FENCE KEEPS DRIVE FROM BEING A HOMER! | siderable attention as Allen is fairly well known in local pugilistic circles, altho this will be his first appeafance in a Seattle ring. The card looks very good on paper. It might well be ) f Ls termed an all-star bill. The bout between Danny Edwards, the colored flyweight from California, and Jimmy Lewis, the little Tacoma gladiator, promises well ’ EDWARDS WON FROM PINKMAN HAS OFFER TO | FAST PORTLANDER BOX IN LOS ANGELES | Eddie Pinkman is displaying a! eae tae Gok teen Fe owns letter from the matchmaker of Jack | Clever little Portland 105 Doyle's club in Los Angeles asking | Previous to his meeting him terms for another melee in the) A wa California village. The writer calls Eddie the most) GIL DOBIE WEEDS 18 GOING LIFORNIA about Danny in a while the very popular ‘orthwest, will) come the landslide, | I! run into a losing | will set him down) and Los An- effect that Danny in fine style at! time, and ia much in! Promoters in the two) NEFF NOT ON FARM, IN LOS ANGELES that farm stuff about Chet | in Los Angeles right getting ready for a fight.” above is what genial Dan| had to say after glimpsing the in these columns yesterday was not in Los anewies,| hibernating on his b secs | i Fk oes z The Best in Town! i) idl i il We'll let you judge the values—come in and give these Singerman $15 Clothes a good, thor- ough inspection. You’ll find they are just what we claim for them—the best values in town for the money. Tomorrow—Underwear Special REGULARS OUT OF FIRST SQUAD NOW From present indications, the University of Washington will present a lineup for the com- ing intercollegiate games that differs from any that hae ever been used by Coach Dobie. The regulars have not been taki any interest In their work, and Dobie hae been put- ting them on scrubs as fast as possible. Louis Seagraves, three years All-Northwest guard, and the captain for the 1916 eleven, is one of the regulars who |e holding down a second-team berth. George Smith, the lanky end, who received his first taste of intercollegiate football in the O. A. C. game, two years ago, Is playing end on the sec- ond team. ‘The men who will play the different positions on the var- not the ones who have the welaht avestion in their fav: a | vl $1.50 Union Suits, spring needle ribbed, trouser seat, specially priced tomorrow at...... shat Live Corner DD far Third and Pike This picture, taken at the first game of the world series between the B: lyn Nationals, shows “Tilly” Walker of Boston sliding into third base on his three-bagger in the first The ball struck the fence and thus was prevented from be- ing a homer. Walker was left on third. Mowrey is playing third; Connolly is the umpire. Later Walker got his second hit, a single, sending Hooper home in the fifth inning. Walker got on base on an error in the sixth Inning and scored a run, He is the player filling the shoes of the great Inning. it was the first hit of the game. Tris Speaker, sold to Cleveland id by Boston at the start of the season. in| in Americans and Brook- Many Comment on Grid Mix Set for Saturda scheduled for Satur-jof trouble, On the Freshmen High | | squad are a number of players who starred on the different school | teams thruout the country. Coach Miller has not yet picked is definite Mneup, but the follow- ng aro sure to start the game; e playing | puter, at right-half, is the b going to | backfield man the Freshmen have nd Before entering the university, he Played on the Marysville College team of Tennessee, where he was picked as the individual star of the jSeason. The other half is being held down by Gerald Todd, mer Stadium high pl coma, who has been pic city half for the pi ;Coach Milier has | Pope, the big Queen Anne tackle of 1916, into a punter magnitude, The game day between the Broadway football team and the University | Freshmen fs the talk of the unl-| versity campus. The odds seem to| be in favor of the MATCHMAKER ADAMS 18 LINING UP A CARD George Adams, matchmaker for the Elks’ club, is busy lining up a card for the coming show to be held by that institution in the near future. ‘Muff’ Bronson, the sen- sational Portland school boy, will head the bill if he wins or draws with Ad Wolgast in their bout soon to be staged in the Rose City avs » I Masquerade DREAMLAND Tonight $100 in Cash Prizes Admission 25¢ Includes 5 Dance Tickets $1.15 “|freakish dip of his fast ball. of the first} Red Sox Hurlers Are Cranky About Their Backstops They're a superstitious fot, tho Red Sox pitchers! That's why they insist on hav- ing certain catchers work with them whenever they're assign- ed to the slab. Even Manager Bill Carrigan has| been stung by the superstition | bug. The master of the world's | champions would rather concede defeat than send any backstop oth- er than Forrest Cady into the line- |up the day he picks Ernie Shore to | pitch. Shore, .by the way, is a difficult jhurler to catch, because of the The) gaunt Southerner positively de-| mands that Cady catch him, Other catchers have handled the string! bean of the Boston staff, but} hore never seems as steady as hen Cady is his recetver. the same token, Dutch rd always Insists that Manager Carrigan work be hind the e the day he pitches. Bili’e throwing arm Is nothing to brag about, but long on the steadying bull” which he always brings Into use the instant Leonard exhibits symptoms of wavering, and this is the reason the southpaw wants his | boss on the job. | Carrigan {s one of the smartest maskmen in the business, and Leonard figures that his handling jof every situation that arises off. sets any handicap that his glass arm may give the enemy. | | Chester Thomas always draws| jthe “grabbing” task when Mays or Ruth is doing the curving. Mays, with his peculiar “subway” delivery, is a hard guy to catch, and no one else seems to do the Job as welt as Thoma: HE CONFESSES TO SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12.—A frank statement that he was con- victed of wrecking a Texas bank, and escaped from the Huntville rison to take up the passing of ad checks was nmde today by Allen M, Dale, arrested just as he and a companion, Miss Signe Jer stedt, of Bellingham, Wash., were about to go to Los Angeles, He made the statement, he said, to clear the girl, who knew nothing of his record, Dale declares his real name ts Dean M, Delmas. He was in Mon- | ta Washington and Oregon be- fore coming here to operate. This prisoner says the bad check caus- ing his arrest was passed to buy Mies Jurstedt a Diapatches from 8t. Louls indi- cate that those fans who bet on the Browns to win the pennant have organized a Yesdamit club. SAVE INNOCENT GIRL 918, by M. ©. Fisher, Reg. U. & Pat. Office? Seattle Golfer Makes Hole in 1 on City Course The first hole in been made on the links at ferson park. Glenn Hupp, playing Charles { Ball recently, did the trick at ) the third hole. He dr off } i with an iron and was sur. } prised as his partner when little white pellet disappeared } inte the cup. } So proud of the fact was Hupp ; that he told every friend he met fon the course of the feat. His joy was short lived, however, for he foozled several shots aft- er that, and finished the first nine with a 54. one has } ef Pete Muldoon | to Have Same Squad) Pete Muldoon, mi manager of the Seattle ice hockey team, is a vis- ftor in Seattle on his way to Spo- |kane. Pete came up from Frisco |All of Seattle's last year’ will be back with the exception of Jack Walker A BY BUD FISHER. HE DIDA'T Be SAY ANY THING! )| they \ are reported Cheasty’s Smart Clothes For the conservative bus- iness man, as well as for the young man who fan- cies the latest modes. $15 to $50 “Values Tell” ROBINS, WORN AND _WEARY, ABOUT TO © BECOME ORPHANS t only) They started with a flourish an@ wound up with a sound of escaping steam, é. Tho defeated in the number of runs scored in the first two games — in Boston, they were not beaten im | — spirit. The difference yesterday | could be seen all over the lot, | NEW YORK, Oct. 12.- Not only tlare the Dodgers on the ragged edge |of a bottomless precipice, so far as) this world's series is concerned, but are ut to be orphaned. President\Ebbets has put the club on the market, and various buyers ngling for it, includ- ing James ney, former head of | the Braves, The Red Sox afford some meas- of satisfaction for the Brooklyn |crew in this respect. They are about to see the parting of old ties. Carrigan is playing his last world’s broad, general impression was that about all that remained to be dome was to run the cooling engine the shed for the winter. LINCOLN IS FAVORITE Lincoln was favored to defeat series and his last professional) the West Seattle high school grid | batt, he says. Carrigan gave Presi- dent Lannin notice that he would \retire at the close of this season |some time ago, and up to today the j big boss of the Red Sox has been unable to dissuade the peppery leader. The Dodgers looked like a beaten ball club when they left the field team | yesterday for the first time since| qualify for the series opened. The kick had gone out of their fighting spirit. squad this afternoon on field. LETTER FOR BILLY WRIGHT There is a letter on the spor editor's desk for Billy Wright, 7 boxer. 4 Certain boxfight Promoters oughta, bh ribbons at horse shows. They're pe by ited charge : new thing for a cigarette to todo | wage Hive Hy wi Perr > ig. the result of the truly marvelous Chesterfield blend! No other CIGARETTES cota, Chesterfield Blend b mgpanced s the mest famous Teh cee SSK SU for isc tegaramees« combined with the hen for 10c py WEY" ; —and yet they're

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