The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1916, Page 7

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“Boon! WE Look! Just tHe TYPE , THE VERY MAN, WON'T NEED. NO ‘make uP" OR NOTHIN, LOOK arhim, Just THE THRE FOR THE PAR, THAT ComPLeTe OUR CAST AND MAKES OUR PICTURE A SUCCESS OH, MUTT, LJUST GoT 4& SOB WITH & MOVING PKTURE COMPANY, 1GET FSO A WEEK, THEY'RE GONNA PRODUCE EDGAR ALLEN POE 's $4 MURDERS. IN THE RUE MORGUE” AND THEY SAY I'm JUST THE THPE THEY NEED AND Wort NEED ANY GRID SEASON ON COAST TO BE IN .. ‘FULL BLAST NOW BY EDWARD HILL OOTBALL on the Pacific Coast will pass the the soup stage of the menu this week when three big intercollegiate grid games will be staged. Idaho urday the U. art will tackle Oregon Aggies will be contest Nebraska Cornhuskers on Multnomah field, and Walla Walla in their yearly melee; warriors of the pigskin | California at ey, and the} J. Stewart's) Whitman tangle Friday on at Sat- of O. ing against Dr. at. ory According to the dopesters, Oregon should have but little trouble in winning from the California lads. The Oregonians will be reinforced, as it were, by Johnny Beckett, hero of) former contests, and Hugo Bezdek, football mentor at the! Eugene college, is sitting bac’ k and looking forward to the most successful football year of his career as a coach. CAN'T DOPE GAME IN PORTLAND SATURDAY It is pretty hard to lay any dope team has never been parts before so a com- » Parison of scores and such like d do little toward getting the pmired result. Reports from Port. MI indicate, however, that the Aggies’ stock took a jump skyward ted ee their recent victory over BROTHER MAY BE PITTED AGAINST BROTHER HERE When Oregon's Aggies and Whit- man meet at Corvallis, on the 4th of next month, two brothers are Hable to be pitted against each other in the rival lineups. The boys are George and Frank Busch. ‘The former is an Aggie guard and the latter a tackle at Whitman. MANY GOING TO SEE GAME AT EUGENE, NOV. 4. A large delegation of Seattle folk will journey to Eugene, Ore., on the 4th of next month to see the Universities of Washington and Oregon mix in the first football encounter between these institu. tions of learning in two years. A special train has also been char- tered by former Oregon students TUFTS TOOK HARVARD'S MEASURE IN 1875 [he recent defeat of Harvard by rs was the second time that the fle college has humbled the Crimson grid warriors. In 1875, the first year football was introduced at Tufts, and a year after the first Harvard team took the field, the little school clashed with Harvard and defeated it by one goal. With the exception of Princeton ‘This means than any Man, Women = Child who is a pores of this may consult the ex-Govern- ment Physician and obtain @ pre- ription for any disease, Ee. Our Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Spe- cialist will give you the same serv- fees, FREE—so why wait? RIGHT DRUG CO. FE ool af ord aye yy is and Yale the only other teams to win from Hatvard since 1874 are Dartmouth, Amberst, Cornell, Wes- leyan and Carlisle. | MANY NEBRASKANS TO | COME WITH TEAM | Two hundred seats have been [ordered reserved by Nebraskans who are coming West for Satur day's foothall melee between Ne braska and the Oregon Aggies. The Nebraska squad is scheduled to arrive in Portland on Friday. BY H. C. HAMILTON U. P. Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. ment bearing out that of President Hempstead of the Giants and prov- ing the correctness of President Tener’s refusal to take action in re- series of the National league sea- son in Brooklyn was made today to the United Press. The statement came from a source close to John McGraw and undoubtedly ts correct. McGraw's action the The United Press in- Manager wrong way. fusal to direct the play of his men | from the oench throws no bad light on their actions, and any resent- ment they may feel from statements attributed to Mc- Graw. Agreed on Course McGraw, it developed, took a Hempstead, as Hempstead said in but it further developed that Mc- Graw had taken several players into his confidence and that they knew what was to be done, The basis of the action was upon McGraw's friendship with Wilbert Robinson, manager of the Dodgers. McGraw was aware that whia perings were making their way effect that his friendship with the Dodger manager would prevent him | MEN | Can Save You Time and Money Because I determine I then am prepared to yor nystematic way. 1 Hy Heens exp atth Skin Di bles requiremen 914 or 606 for Blood Disorders, it. nd your needs before attempting to treat bout my work In a - to pi r lence in my profession I treat Nervous Kt 11 years - Debility, Blood and dney and Bladder Trou- ‘onic Disorders, Reasonable scan be arranged to meet your CONSULTATION FREE, Come to wor me tor a Wasserman blood 02? Ltherty Bi DR. DONAWAY Opposite Postoffice, LOST VITALITY RESTORED Remedy Discovered by = Forty-Yenr Biood and Nerve Spectaliat Men who have wasted the Vitality of Young Manhood; Men who have gone the pace; Men whose eyes are dulled, whose brains are muddled, whose Nervous Energy is exhausted from Excess, Dissipation, Worry or HELP FOR Men who have lost the Cou! sary to Perfect Manhood; Me spondent, 81 Overwork. rage, Grit and Vitality £0 neces. who Wit, Pratt te Be less, and who have los who are Hopeless, Weak, Prematurely ‘dia, fod Revetlost bee tion, should try DR. PIERCE’S Sent by mail to any addre box, or six boxes for fi Gontain 216 dones. antoed Coat lean Can anything be Gall or write today. Cr n @ dobars. SEXOID PILLS lain wrapper, Pri Bix boxes will last than $1 per week. E Money returned If medicine falls to benefit ’ star fairer than this? cular free. RAYMOND REMEDY CO. HOTEL ANTLERS, FOURTH AND UNION 18.—A state | gard to John McGraw’s action in| leaving the bench during the last/ Apparently every one has taken | formant declares the leader's re) must come | course which already had been | agreed upon between himself and | a statement he had for the press, | around in baseball circles to the | | Spokane Promoter of Boxing Strong for 10-Round Bill Stub Hooker, Spokane's champion fight promoter, is in Seattie on business, and inci- dentally ie putting in some big boosts for the 10round bill, to be introduced at the next see- sion of the state legislature. Stub had things well in hand in the Inland Ertpire metropo- lle when Lou Bodie, the biggest wecig in the pearing in a fake match and then hot-footing it for parts unknown. Since that time, which was about a year kept his finger Hooker is a member of the state board of barber examin- ers, and is on tour of the state | giving the whisker scrapers the up and down. | Steve Reynolds C Off for Portland Bout Steve Reynold has left for Port land, where he is scheduled to box | Valley Trambitas, the hard-hitting | Rumanian middleweight, eix round lon Friday night in the Oregon town The battling fireman said he was In good shape, and hoped to bring home the bacon. CHANCE TEAM LEADS The Los Angeles club leads the Coast league by a healthy margin. Chance's team is being picked to win the gonfalon. Ho, Ham! The Secret Is Out! All About Why Jawn McGraw Qait His Giants in Brooklyn | from sending his team thru at their best efforts. Wanted to Keep Out “Ho wanted to keep his skirts clean,” sald the United Press’ in- formant. “He knew that he and/ Robbie were considered far too! good friends for the good of the game, and he made an agreement with President Hempstead that if| things did not pass off just right in| the series with Brooklyn, he would leave the bench and turn the man- agement over to one of the players. “The first game played at Brook- lyn was a poorly played game from |@ Giant standpoint, considering that they just then were furnishing the sensation of the league, and they lost. The next day they play- ed a weird game, and McGraw, sensing things that might have been sald, took the action that had been agreod upon. His players were not playing the kind of baseball McGri wanted them to, and he immediately left. “That wasn't the first time play- ers had done things in opposition first time such a thing had hap- |pened at such a critical period. So levery one got excited. “McGraw went to the diamond, jtold Perritt and Fletcher what was about to be done, then went back |to the bench and held a conference with several players, they finally agreeing to the appointment of arley Herzog as temporary man- ager.” Oregon Coach Is Also Holding a CORVALLIS, Or., Oct. 18.— Fearing that the sawdust sur- face of Multnomah field will have a tendency to slow up his men In the je with Nebrasi Saturday, Coach Pipal of the Oregon Aggies had the whole team gamboling around over a sawdust gridiron today. The Practice was secret, with alert student guards at every ap Proach to the Inclosure. Special attention wi given to the punting of “Tuffy” Conn, who is expected to be the Aggies’ mainstay at the aerial game. Pipal will send against Ne- braska practically the same Harvard Squad Is Badly Bunged Up CAMBRIDGE, Ma Oct. 18,— “Fight week” tn Harvard football has started with a rush, and it was a badly bunged up lot of warriors who reported at the stadium today, Under the lash of Perey Haugh- ton's best coaching tongue, the Varsity ripped thry the scrub eleven for six quick touchdowns yesterday. STAR—WEDNESDAY, O CT, 18, 1916. PAGE 7 (Copyright, 1916, by T. ©. Fisher, Trade Mark Neg. U. @. Pat. Offion) Chinese Football Star | to McGraw's wishes, but it was the | Secret Session| Kal freshmen fdotball team, regarded b sport. BERKELEY, Cal, Oct. 18.—A Chinese boy is the new idol in first | year sport circles at the University) of California, Coming to the fore out of a class of 1,500 freshmen, Kai Kee, an Americanized Chinese student, won by sheer ability the quarterback berth on the “infant eleven.” By | a consistent display of headwork In Music may have charms to soothe polo players, even tno they may be representing the Y. M. C, A.—that's a different matter again. The Elks’ polo contingent went down to defeat last night in the Crystal pool at the hands of the 1Y. M. C. A. sextet, 9 to 6, the one of last week. the Elks’ crew and Capt. John Saun- the evening with the spectators. Next Tuesdi another game is on the schedule. The lineups: Y. M,C. A. Elks. Saunders, (c). Forward. Substitutions Rugg for Johnson. Summary: Field goals, Paul Johnson, Lloyd Thomas 2, Roy O'Neal 3. Foul goals—Wilson Lee 3. Officlals —~ Referee, Charley Hulen; timekeepers, Al Goldsmith Montana May Get a Boxing Commission Ike Cohen, former Seattle fighter, writes from Great Falls, Mont., to the effect that everything there is fine and dandy, He says that they expect to have 12-round go bouts there, under a commission, after election, next month, INDIANS WIN MELEE The Carlisle Indians defeated the Lebanon Valley football warriors yesterday, 20 to 6. FOOTBALLERS AT WORK The Lincoln and Queen Anne high school squads are busy work ing for the Saturday football mix (BULLBROS. Just Printers 1013 ‘THIRD MAIN 1063 Kee, Chinese quarterback on th the savage breast—but savage water | The | game was much more exciting than | O'Neal of| ders of the victors mado the hits of) University of California y critics as a comer In the gridiron | Present season struggles he has al- |ready become a favorite of the | bleacher fans. When his freshmen days are over jhe will undoubtedly get his chance with the varsity. His fast work has attracted attention of the coaching staff of the California eleven and he is being heralded as a future star in the first line grid- ifron contests on the Pacific Const. Y.M.C.A. Team Victor in Water Polo Encounter and E. A. Fry; scorekeeper, J, F. 8. Park. AMUSEMENTS wen” S&PINE ORPHEUM VAUDEVILLE T DA All This Week ANDREW TOMBE “THE BRIDE Raymond — Bond Elizabeth Shirley — Witt, Burns and Torren: —Bernard and a - The ¢ ERN BALL. AMHR —Orpheum Travelogue Any SEAT MAY BE RESERVED PHONE MAIN aii MATINEE DAILY 10 25-50¢ EVENINGS 10 25-50 75 ILKES PLAYERS GC vore rm Tonight, §:20-—-All Week “THE TRAVELING SALESMAN® A Delightful Comedy-Drama Nights, 100 to 60c be Matinee Tomorrow—2:20 NEW PANTAGES HM, 'T With Harrington Reynolds and Por- ence Moore Seattle Prima Donna, « NG 4 Boves. 6:30 to 11 Today Hippodrome Road show Five-Part Gold Rooster PI “A WOMAN'S FIGHT with Geraldine O'Brien and Thurdow Hergen. Mats, 100 ony sont; ves. and Sun. 160 Oak Theatre—10c-20c Thrice Datly-—2:30, 7 and 9 The Monte Carter Musical Comedy Company tn HIP! HIP!! HOORAY!!! 90 Minutes of Fun and Dainty Maids, Also “THE YELLOW MENACK” Big Serial. | 1Hatch today smashed the world’s| the ring, trounced him unmercifully, pase and furious, but the Yankee | | | lost one of its star players. BY BUD FISHER. THEY WANTED ME To PLAN THE (N “THe “ape” “MURDER. In THe RUG MoRcue” AND SAID = Diba NEED Any OMAKE UP? (Corerngin, 198, oy WC Puen ———IGIL’S TEAM Is| GETTING | READY | Strengthened by the return | of Captain Loule eagraves | and George Smith, both varsity | letter men, the University of Washington eteven hae started | its final preparation for the | Whitman game to be played | on University field, the 28th of | of. this month, | Following the University’s de: | feat of the Navy Yard team, the prospects for a winning team have | taken a turn for the better. The| varsity showed the best form last | Saturday that {t has displayed so! far this season. | Coach Dobie is not satisfied with | the way his charges hit the line, however, and he 1s going to drill them on that point this week until they become efficient fe tt it, Sidney Hatch Sets New World’s Mark} | CHICAGO, Oct 18, — Sidney reoord for the 100-mile run by cut ting it about 4 hours. The time of his run from Milwaukee to Chicago) was 14:23:30. Albert Corey's time in | 1907 was 18:33. The actual dis- tance covered by Hatch from Mil-| waukee to Chicago was 95 miles. | Bill ae Lost To Broadway High Broadway's “toot ‘ball squad has wi Ham Bowden, center dnd manager has been forced from the lineup on account of appendicitis, He will) probably be out of the game for the rest of the season. His successor has not yet been given out by Coach Henderson. Now Abe Would Beat Boxer Who Walloped Monte | Cheasty’s Hats Are Always in Style All the Hat Leaders ai $2.50 to $10.00 “Values Tell” FRESHMEN TO PLAY GRID GAME With most of his players on the sick or injured list, Hap Miller will have to do some tall hustling in order to take @ strong team to Aberdeen Sat- urday where the freshmen will play the Aberdeen High school, The freshmen are not satisfied with their showing in the Broad | way High game, and are dickering | |for a return match. The most log- |ical date for it would be the 4th of | November. Then Varsity goes to | Eugene to play the University of |seen whether this ABE ATTELL. | Abe Attell is to do the comeback stunt, Abe says he can do it and 8} it isn’t money he's after, it’s the honor of the Attell family. | Not long ago Joe Lynch trounced Brother Monte, the last of the At tells to carry the family colors into ending with a seventh round knock- out. Abe couldn't stand this reflection on the ability of the Attells as/ fighters and secured a match with) Lynch, Lynch {sn’t greatly impressed. | Ho's guessing he can beat up the| whole Attell family, Coach Dietz Puts Over Few Changes PULLMAN, Oct. 18.—Capt. Bangs has been sent to the second squad, | and other changes are to be made | in the W. 8. C. football eleven, as the result of the defeat at the hands | of the Oregon Aggies last Saturday. Brown has replaced Durham at quarter. The freshmen have It remains to be will suit the Oregon team. that date open. | Broad way squad. Jack Britton Is Winner in Bout BOSTON, Oct. 18.—Jack Britton successfully defended his claims to — the welterweight title here last ~ night by besting Ted (Kd) Le in a 12-round fracas. The bout outfought and outgeneraled the Britisher. NEW YORK, Oct. 18—Tip_ O’Nell, Chicago light weight, wi given a eevere mauling last night at the Broadway Sporting club by Jack Dillon, of Indiana. O’Neil showed an ability to take a lot of punishment and successfully pulled thru repeated attempts to score a knockout. VINDICATED BY THE COURT Medical Board Ordered to Restore License to Dr. J. Eugene Jordan After Evidence of Remarkable Cures Was Produced in Court Cured of Tuberculosis On January 7 of the year 1915, Doctor J. Eugene Jor- dan was arraigned before the Stato Medical Board and his license to practice medicine revoked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vertisement reproduced, which had been running tn the local newspapers, was untrue, that Doctor Jordan could not cure the diseases mentioned therein. Doctor Jordan appealed te the courts in the matter and the trial of the case which followed, 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 produced on be- half of Doctor Jordan are among the best people in the city. Professional people, people of standing tn the community, people who a: known to the Court person- ally and people who are known to the citizens of this city generally as being among the best people in the city. And I don’t think that it can be contended that they were either credulous or ignorant except as the laity generally is somewhat ignorant of medical mitters. There is no contention here th bas been given which {s at all harmful. of the testimony in this case seems to show, as far as that te concerned, that any medicine that ‘ed by Doctor Jordan has ever has been adminis tended to benefit the ent. There {s no contention on the p and it so stated by counsel for there was anything in this advertisement that was {njuriovs to public morals, So that it gets Cown to whether vertisement is so grossly moral turpitude on the part of Do Under all the testimony ip this ca ment is so grossly untrue as find that the adverd untrue as to involve by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies Doomed to a Crippled Condition for Life by Other Physicians, Absolutely Cured by Glandular Remedies READ HIS TESTIMONIAL Twelve years ago I had tu! Beattie, Nov. 1, 1914. bercular abscet on my neck and under my arma, and the doctors here offered te cut them out for in crippling my arm for life. cured me without an oe. well ever since « 00, but admitted that it might result Doctor J, Fugene Jordan and I pare. pemsalnen, Signed) c. B. 2716 Fourth ‘ave. *North, I have been giving practics! demonstrations of the merits of on file in my office, written ty grateful Patients whom I have cured, will attest to Its wonders. Cures of Asthm: Diabetes, Chronic Paralysis, Rheumatism, Mentn, Goltre, Strabismus, called incurable dis: itis, Vitus’ en. Chronto Gastralgta, Hard 1 Heart Disease (including Heart Leakage) Locomotor Ataxia, Sctatica, Senile Gangrene, Neuralgia, Dani . Chronic Inflammation of mps tn the Br Hip Disease, Infa: Jaundice, Paralyeis, Spinal Curvature, © and most of the other so- ‘There being a number of Doctors Jordan in Seattle, it fs well te bear tn mind the full name and eaee f 2 indays from i Ro Bolicited. Wa cures. m, to 6 p. hat any medicine | to involve moral In fact, all Jordan GREATER VIN The Medical Bo: ‘art of the State, the State, that ly cured patients r or not this ad- under oath, ctor Jordan, » I cannot First Avenue, Seattle. address of Doctor ‘J. Hugene Office hour: a. m_to 8 m, Goneuitatiah trem Corre- ich ‘each Saturday Star for remarkable turpitude on the part of Doctor Jordan and judgment will, therefore, be for Doctor DICATION COULD NOT BE DESIRED ard 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 rcores of actual- as witnesses for his case. The stories of their remarkable cures have been stated Doctor Jorden has caused this statement to be published in order to acquaint the public and his many friends with t Proven facts in the case. Dr. Jordan is now located on Second Floor of the Mutual Life Building, First and Yesler.

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