Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Hats off to our old friend Ban, know a thing or two about the pig Johnson, president of the Ameri.) skin time. can league. Ban manages to keep) Coach Harper, with a wealth ot Dis batting averake well up in! new material on hand, ts develop. winter, the same as In the summer) ing a team which bids fair to have time jit on any other squad in the “Big “The prices of world’s series) Nine,” seats have been advanced until! they are unreasonable,” says Ban, He promises to do something to-| ard cutting down the high cost) tonla. of the national nuisance at the first) e & 8 opportunity. | The U. of W. football squad has 3 |no game scheduled for next Satur. doe Bonds, Tacoma heavy- day, On October 28, howevert weight, writes that he won a | Dobie's warriors are scheduled to 1Sreund decision from Denver | take on Whitman at University field Jack Geyer in the Colorado [University field, by the way, ts the Prohibition note—Apple Jack was a recent winner at La- metropolis on last Monday (new name for Denny field night. | ao 8 He also states that his match Jack. Allen, the Portland with Fred Fulton has been cinched. It will be 20 rounds and take — on orier w. lightweight, who put up a siug- ging me with Nick Sugar at Dreamiand on Friday iast, is back In Portland boosting Se- and something on Michigan,/ uw 8 PRINCETON IS IN FRONT RANK BY H, C, HAMILTON U, P, Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 16.—-There are three things which stand out today as probable forecast ere of the turn of the wheel in doping the Eastern football champlonship thie fall, In the firet place, Princeton takes front rank thru ite vic» tory over Tufts, a team which | defeated Harvard ‘ thin and the re iN for future Biue, And, Harvard be gins to appear as a trouble. maker since ite game succeed. ed in making North Carolina do tricks and go down to de- feat. Harvard's victory, by a score of 21 to 0, seems to be a certain tn- dication that Perey Haughton ts wkolng to get some speed out of his} eleven after all, and dopesters are! again giving the Crimson a chance} with Yale and Princeton. Pep Dominates Vale The revival of the bulldog spirit at Yale has put a lot of pep into backers of the New Haven team. Instead of being satisfied with a) good game against Lehigh, in other week. about umpty ump clubs, all running, City is In Opposition to each other. jwhen the University Be f and Oregon Aggies clash on Word from Portland is to the ef-| attie promoters fans. : fect that Tommy Burns, former! Allen told 4 heavyweight champion, has or; men he was accorded fine 4 ganized a boxing club In the city) treatment 7 of roses. It is known as the Broad-| 3 J way club, and will show every! Ear! R. Goodwin, a Portland This gives Portland sport scribe, writes that the Rose due for a football treat of Nebraska the Boy, page “Battered” Nel. Multnomah club's gridiron next son! Joe Rivers recently won | Saturday. a fight. Dr. EB. J, Stewart, Nebraska 22s coach, formerly held sway at the Watch Notre Dame this year, is} Oregon Agricultural college and ts he dope being handed out by foot-| anxious to have his new love wal- experts who are supposed tojlop the tar out of the old one. -CHICAGO FANS ARE AFTER JOBS OF CUB Hoa brow of another and would have refused to see it alight elsewhere. Rowland started this season with a club acknowledged to be strong enough, on paper, to walk away with the American league cham |pionship. But he struggled tn ahe depths of second, third, and even fourth place most of the season For a short time he had his team out in front, and then began to falter. When the crack appeared in the would [drive of his men, Charles Comiskey placed the crown on the |sent out a rush order for Kid Giea- fon to report. The kid did report and the White Sox immediately be gan to come back. The result was that Gleason was given the credit. No matter {f {t was Rowland’s ef- forts which had elevated the Sox into their final chance at the pen- nant, Rowland. would not have been given the credit. It would have gone to Gleason Now the Chicago fans have plac- ed Rowland and Joe Tinker tn the same boat. Both of their heads are due to drop, they declare, and they are picking Ed Gleason as the most Prominent bidder for the manageri- al post with the White Sox. Their critics declare Rowland has had two chances with one of the greatest teams the American league ever saw, but they say he has failed to make good. They have entirely overlooked the fact that Eddie Collins slumped in hitting, and that Red Faber was taken {Il at a point where his work would have done the most good. NEW YORK, Oct. 16—Clar- ence Rowland, manager of the : Chicago Cube, is an unenvied man. He stands today the topic j of knockers, the undeserving recipient of derision from a bevy of Chicago fans. And Rowiland’s position is a peculiar one. He could have done nothing to correct it even if he had won a pennant for the tle and Wash- ington com- plete lines of icest li. Rowland deserves some commen- choi Cali dation for the fight he has made fornia Grape with his team, even if he didn't send it hurtling down the season's path to a pennant. It fs a good guess that the former minor leaguer will start at the helm of Juice, Mineral Waters, etc., at lowest prices. the Chicago entry. Joe Tinker's case in different All orders ship- Tinker had a pretty fair team, and da re- he wrecked it to run in some Fed- ped y eral leaguers and new talent from the mino1 He has failed to build eam, and his crown apparently is totterin But {t looks as if the knockers have begun too early on Rowland. MINNESOTA U. AND MO NTANA MAY MIX PHYSICIAN MISSOULA, Oct. 16.—It fs al “‘This means than any Man, Woman|™ost an assured fact that the Uni- Bang Shey 3B. f tire ex Govern | versities of Montana and Minnesota ment Physician and pre-/ will clash here on the gridiron on a Our bee, ae Nose disease: Fate | Thanksgiving day. The consent of “Big Nine,” the Middle West cialist will give you the same serv-| the conference, is all that remains to _ Mees, FREE—so why wait? be secured, and this will likely be ere: gp gg co. given. iE | 1 Can Save You Time and Money Because I determine your needs before attempting to tre : you. I then am pre systematic way. Tam a graduate of lege, legally licensed to pi experien attle. ceived. years in Se- Nervous Debility, Blood and Skin Disorders, Kidney and adder Trou- bles and Chronic Disorders, Reasonable terms, and fees can be arranged to meet your requirement MSULTATION FREE. 914 or ‘or Blood Disorders, Come to me fora W jerman blood tent "02 Uberty Men who have wasted the Vitality of Young Manhood; ave gone the pace; Men whose eyes are dulled, whose brains are muddled, whose Nervous Energy is exhausted from Dissipation, Worry or Overwork. HELP FOR WEAK MEN and who have lost tin re Hopeless, Weak, pasiaee ims ‘cid, and lon, Should uy DR. PIERCE’S SEXOID PILLS Bent by mail to any address in Blain wrapper, Price $1 per hox, or six boxes for five dollars. Six boxes will last 36 days, Contain 216 doses, Cost leas than $1 per week. Every box Evaranteed. Money returned if medicine fails to benefit after © fair trial. Can anything be fairer than this? Call or write today. Circular free RAYMOND REMEDY CO. HOTEL ANTLERS, FOURTH AND UNION AND SOX SKIPPERS, | BUT which the Blue ran up a count of 12 to 0, Tad Jones and Capt. Black began to kick as soon as the Kame was over and now they are ready | |to put some more fight and nerve| into Old Eli's heart | All reports show that Yale's kicking was bad in the Lehigh game, so that ix the point on which the coaches will concentrate thelr |, enersy fut other points were en |near perfect as might be expected | in an eleven that had the coaching Yale oas oxperienced. Rush ts Worried Down at Princeton, “Speedy’ Rush ts worried. About the best thing the Tigers did tn thelr con-| Mict with Tufts was to fumble.| They did it constantly, and that Was about the only consistent part of their play, The line sparkled at [some stages and made it possible for Princeton to break muss up the Tufts’ trick forma- tions, But fumbling was the one |thing the Tigers had been drilled against, and the fact that it was so flagrant did something to Rush's plana. With Perey Haughton back on the job, Harvard is sure to be given some stiff work. Haughton's hand showed tn the North Caro. lina game. There is no doubt that [bis presence did much for the Crimson in that contest, and doubdt- }lees it will do much for an eleven! t which apparently bas not been able) to find itself. Cornell coaches are well satisfied with the showing made against Williams. A huge score was ron up by the Ithacans and now the men are being pointed for the clash with Harvard. Pennsylvania proved disappoint- ing. Swarthmore, considered a weak team, by the use of a finely developed forward pass, worked its way to a touchdown in the Phila- delphia game. Jt will be against this recurrence that Bob Follwell is going to drill his men. Taken from every angie, it is made easy for any one to see that it is anybody's championship, with no one having a big edge and with | no team as yet weak enough to be considered out. OFF THE John Reid, said to be the father of golf in this country, died recent- ly in New York, at the age of 76 He was past president of the United States Golf association eee The Country club of Phoenix, Ariz, was robbed recently. The) robbers made a clean sweep, tak ing every bit of golfing parrpher jnalia in sight cee Seattle golfers are back from Vancouver, B. C., where the local team finished second in the annual punch bowl tourney “ee For the first time in quite a while the Waverly club of Portland was répresented at the tourney, which was won by Vancouver. | eee Here's another story from Chica- |go of a hole in one: Playing in the final, Harry R. Shollenberger and William F. Neil-) son came to the 18th tee all square. The hole is 165 yards, and Shollen- berger's mashie shot rolled to the hole and rested against the pin. When the pin was lifted the ball fell in. Nelson holed his putt for a two, but it did him no good. +e. Spokane started its tournament for the city championship last Sat- urday. eee E, H. Hughes recently won the "|championship of the Spokane Coun-| try club, eee After having settled the Wagner cup tourney, the women of the Se | attle Golf club will begin competi-| tion for the Mary Stseve cup. SMALL CROWD PAYS TRAPS VISIT But a small crowd of trapshots was out at the Harbor island traps! on Sunday, due to the foggy weath-| er. Those who did turn out report | that the fog made the blue rocks} look as big as cartwheels. C, E, McKelvey won both the 50 and 100- target events, with 45 and 95. SEMI-PRO OUTFIT | HOLDS CHAMPIONS | NEW HAVEN, Oct. 16.—The Col-! onials, a loca mi-pro team, with Ty Cobb, Detroit star, on first base for them, held the champion Boston Red Sox to a 3-3 tie here Sunday.| Hooper and Gardner were out of the Sox lineup. Ruth twirled and allowed eight hits, LE GORE, ONCE BARRED FROM ATHLETICS, NOW BANKED |Gore scored touchdown and a> Met your room,” the friend ment kicked a field within two min- advieed. rod . ebgepetecnge rd ppg hal “Oh, he's used to It now,” Without nourishment, no health thru and/|__°* STAR—MONDAY, OCT. 16, 1916. PAGE 7 ON TO PUT YALE BACK ON TOP Third Ave. and Pike St. Phone Main 5769 SEATTLE YOUR APPEARANCE is not a thing to be lightly neg- lected. It impresses others for or against you before you speak, and may..be remembered after your words are forgotten. The Teeth are among the most prominent and important features. They may be pleasing or dis- pleasing in themselves, and they largely determine the expression of the mouth. When the Natural Teeth have been lost, artificial teeth, skilfully selected and placed, should by all means be secured. Without teeth, no chewing. Without chewing, no digestion. Without digestion, no nourish- rred from athietice at Vale last season on account of al- leged professionaliem, Harry Le Gore, reinstated, ie the star on whom the Blue depends to wrest back the gridiron honors Harvard has been monopolizing In the &. Le Gore w uspended eae \ing an investigation by untive: officials, who gharged him with playing summer baseball with « semi-pro team on Long Island. Playing at bis old position, left-| halfback, Le Gore has been a sen sation this year, | He played only a few minutes in ithe Virginia game, and contributed the firet touchdown and a 26-yard dash thru a broken field. A little later he caught a punt and raced 65 yards for a touchdown, This, however, was not allowed on ac \count of holding. In a serub game Kid Broad’s Dog Was Used to It, So He Declared Not having heard anything from Kid Broad for many moons, this one comes as a joy- ful surprise. | The kid was waiking with his new bull pup when he met a friend who sized up the hound. | “That's a fair looking brute, kid; where do you keep him?” “Oh, up in my room,” the kid grinned, “It ain't healthy to keep a last week Le! Broad answered as he left. The East ie already rating reatest individual rated | and efficiency. | Without health, what is life? |AMERICAN ATHLETES | Have your lost Teeth restored | WINNERS IN SWEDEN by my famous and_ successful 4 system of bridgework without plates. My reputation and guarantee stand back of all of my work—it d drop kicking exceptional. AVY YARDERS NO MATCH FOR U, OF W. STOCKHOLM, Oct, 16.—Amert-| can athletes took the majority of the events in the meet which is! being held between the Yankees and the pick of the athletes from | MIGHTY PING ‘SLIPS DOWN BATTING LIST |serubs at the beginning of the last BAN FRANCISCO, Oct.,16-—Ping Bodie is going down #0 rapidly that if he doesn't watch his batting eye he will soon slip clear out of the 200 class. The Cow Hollow slug- | ger lort four points during the past week and today his average wan only 304, Justin Fitegerald in the only other Seal above the .300 mark and he Jost ten points during | 0 the week. The Navy Yard team gave Do- bie’s U. of W. squad men little re- sistance in their football game Bat- urday at University field. Tho Navy Yarders had little training and the University men made yard at will, Doble sent in the| quarter and they continued the slaughter, making the total score 62 to 0. Prohibition States Allow— OREGON: 2 quarts vinous or spirituous 24 quarts malted Every four weeks. SOUTH CAROLINA: Prohibition States Allow— ALABAMA: 2 gallons vinous 5 gallons malted 2 quarts spirituous Every 15 days, ARKANSAS: A uantit 1 gallon liquor or beverage eh , Every month. GEORGIA: TENNESSEE: Any quantity may be shipped in. Bee case Bird vs. State, 175 8. W, 664, April, 1916. 1 gallon vinous 6 gallons malted 2 quarts spirituous Every 30 days. IDAHO: VIRGINIA: For Sacramental purposes only, Permits manufacture for sale KANSAS: outside state, Any quantity may be shipped in. WEST VIRGINIA: MAINE: % gallon liquor Any quantity may be shipped in. hig becca MISSISSIPPI: BRITISH COLUMBIA: Permits manufacture for sale outside province; sale by official vendor; use at private dwelling- house. 1 gallon liquor Every month. NORTH CAROLINA: 1 quart spirituous NOVA SCOTIA: 1 quart vinous 5 gallons malted Permits manufacture and sale Every 15 days. for use at home NORTH DAKOTA: In addition to quantities of liquor Any quantity may be shipped in, OKLAHOMA: 1 gallon spirituous or vinous 1 cask malted At one time, allowed for personal use by dry laws in the various states and provinces, there are unmeasured amounts of Hquor consumed un- lawfully through the medium of boot-leggers and blind-pigs, the Scandinavian countries, BLACK DIAMOND WINS AT SOCCER In the opening socter game of the season Sunday the Black Dia mond team sprang a surprise when {t took the Skinner & Eddy outfit down the line by the score of 2 to The revult was in doubt until the final whistle blew. ance, Op (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) PROHIBITION — LAWS QUANTITIES OF LIQUOR ALLOWED FOR PERSONAL USE IN PROHIBITION STATES AND PROVINCES COMPARED WITH INITIATIVE MEASURE No. 24 Initiative Measure Initiative Measure No. 24 INITIATIVE MEASURE NO. 24: 1 dozen pints or 6 dozen quarts By order in writing, entered in order book, filed and open to inspection by Prosecuting Attor- ney, Attorney General and State Treasurer Do not be deceived by incorrect statements, circulated out of a spirit of resentment against brew- ers, that Initiative Measure No. 24 allows @ purchaser to buy all the beer he may desire, THIS 1S NOT TRUE. INITIATIVE MEASURE NO. 24: Prohibits a purchaser from buy- ing unlimited quantities of beer. A purchaser buying more beer than his needs require for private use at his residence, which shall not be a place of public resort, and a brewer selling the beer to such purchaser, will both be guilty of a gross misdemeanor and liable to a fine of $1,000 and imprison- ment in the county jail for a term of one year. (See sections 14 and 19.) INITIATIVE MEASURE NO. 24: Prohibits agencies, sub-stations or beer warehouses. Purchases can only be made at means the very best Dentistry at prices that will astonish you. It costs you nothing to come in and be convinced. Largest and best-equipped Dental! Offices In the Pacifie Northwest. Nurses in attend in Sundays, 9:30 til! 1 p. m. for your convenience. No. 24 the Head Office of the manufac- turer, Any statement to contrary should be disregarded; it is a mis- representation. The Home Consumers and Manu facturers are not fighting prohibi- tion, but they are endeavoring to make the present dry law useful and practical, and are submitting to the people for that purpose Initiative Measure No. 24, which is a true temperance act, compared to dry laws of the various states and provinces, and it should re- ceive the approval and votes of all citizens, Beer is too bulky to be handled by the boot-leggers. Their profits come from the sale of hard liquors, and are all the larger when they make the liquor themselves. Initia- tive Measure No. 24 strikes a blow at the boot-leg trade. Read Initiative Measure No, 24 and consider it in the light of conditions produced by the dry law of this state—the destruction of the state's second largest ex- port industry, the heavy loss of public revenues, the increase in taxation, the loss to labor, to agri- culture, to community peace and rest from liquor agitation—And all for what? For the present benefit to the boot-leggers, the blind-pigs and public officials, Voters Have a Right to Vote for Any and All Measures on the Ballot Vote for Initiative Measure No. 24—Election Nov. 7th, 1916 (PAID ADVERTISEMENT)