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MUTT, I 30 ADMIRE RED BLLOLED SEAFARING MEN Line MR. SQUIBB, U+S-N WHO 1S STOPPING NEXT DOOR THAT ZT SHOULD Likg To GET ha NE WHOIS A SAILOR NE UrS- NAVY, A HERO MACLING Yo Die FoR, My COUN TRY WELL, WHY Dow? You INVETE Nim OUT TO Dinne Re Youve GOT F4. HED AodOUNT SE WRUNG To BE BETTER me. MUT Ar Geasr 4S WONG AS THE $4 NoLDS or WHITMAN ALWAYS U. OF W. ELEVEN BY EDWARD HILL ASTING all comedy to the side-lines, the} University of Washington gridiron war- riors will have several good and sufficient reasons to really Coa jor- leske’s Whitman squad when it plays the locals at University field on Saturday aft-/ ernoon | Harking back between the two elevens in the past, it is noted that hovered the local college football men over meetings jinx has over of squads when they have bucked the line against the from the Walla Walla institution of learning a sort Take 1910, for instance the first half, the score stood 8 to 0 in favor of the Walla Walla team. Dobie drove his athletes hard in the second ses sion and the U. of W. won, 12 to 8 but not with ease. Every encounter between these two teams since 1908 has been a battle royal. Saturday's fracas should be no exception to the rul: BORLESKE PUTTING MEN THRU STIFF PACES DAN SALT TO TAKE TRIP EAST ON BUSINESS Dan Salt, local boxing promoter. JREMARKING To MY PRIE Ad, GLORWUS LEE You LEAD ACQUAINTED, | 8S A SAILOR IN “THE US: NAVY And wHaT— MADE IT HARD FOR | | When the whistle blew ending} STAR—THURSDAY, OCT. 26, 1916. PAGE 1) UTT AND JEFF—This Looks Like the Last of Mr. Squibb, U. S. N. ee SQUIBB, TWAS JUsr ¥, TODAY, WHAT A Nene HIS NAME’S HAROLD, BUT HE | Reports from the Eastern Wash- ington village are to the effect that Coach Borleske is putting his thru some pretty stiff work He has had the team Indulge a couple of scrimmage practices ce the game with Idaho, The Walla Walla correspondent wires that Capt. Hoover, Busch and Bloomquist are out with injuries. WILLIE MEEHAN ARRIVES HERE FOR BATTLE The much-heralded arrival Willie Meehan, heavyweight cham- pion of the Pacific coast, has tak- en place) Willie and his manager, the justly famous Moose Taussig, were out on the boulevards today, giving the girls a treat. Moose, says his protege will buzz thra| Frank Farmer Friday night, a Dreamland, like one of the saw in the logging camp where Fran has been hanging out. is figuring on a business trip East that will land himself New York for Christm demand for tickets for tomorrow's battles. Reserved seats are on sale at Piper @ Taft's, Brown & Hu len's, Joe Dizard’s, Stratton’s and Battersby & Smith's. EVERETT EVIDENTLY HAD NOT LOOKED VERY CLOSELY When Everett May said g that Pacific Coast conference requir. ing an athlete to complete his com petition within five years of the date he entered college, he evi- ently had not scanned the rules # closely as he should have done. Oregon now admits the rule, but jaime that {t does not apply until he freshman class goes out. That | would be five years from date. Be that as it may, Oregon has between the U. of W. and U. of O.\1y within its rights in demanding football teams, at Eugene, Ore../he be barred when its football team promises to be a gala day for the/ciashes with Oregon. It is nate labeled “Homecom- g° Ty Cobb Failed to Hit in Bunches in ing day” to the alumni of Oregon. fraternity is busy mailing Past Baseball Year ~ -& invitations. CHET NEFF GETS NICE START IN SOUTH That Chet Neff, Seattle light- The inconsistencies of base- weight, is well liked in Los An-| ball are shown in a comparison geles there is no doubt Word| of Ty Cobb’s batting records was received last night that Chet| for 1915 and 1916. has been matched for a four-round| In 1915 Cobb led the melee with Joe Arrouse for the! main event, Tuesday night, at Ver-| non. When an outsider grabs off main events on his second appearance in Los Angeles, he has to show some- thing. JOHNSON AND GORMAN BOX IN PORTLAND FRIDAY Lee Johnson, the colored feath- league and wes credited with 208 hits during the season, But only once during the year did many as four hits ed to pole out as many eafe swats as he did during the pre- vious year, yet he counted four safe blows in as many as seven erweight, en here recently in| games. two shows, and Joe Gorman, who} fought in Everett on Labor day, bave been matched for a six-round tangle in Portland tomorrow night Danny Edwards, the other little) biacls gladiator, is on the same bill It's almost time to hear of Hal- ligan of Nebraska. Wonder if Camp will pick him again this year. EF some folks changed their own temp’r’ments they’d be better satisfied with those of their + a neighbors’, Jour imal VELVET Dan says there has been a bis | ‘ there was no provision in the new | Harold Richardson, Franklin's sensational halfback, is playing his | test year on the team. | He received his first high school f I last year as a touch of foot: member of the Franklin second team. His weight has been his biggest handicap, and when he started turning out for the first squad this season his outlook was BUT 7 AIN'T NO SAILOR Harold Richardson ATTEMPT To DODGE T IS SOME GRID STAR, AT THAT } janything but bright. It was only a short time before he convinced Coach Reseburg that he was going |to be one of the regular backs. He| Was the individual star in both the Ballard and Queen Anne games, outplaying his heavier opponents by a big margin. | The key to his success is the] knowledge that he shows in pick ing the holes made for him. been caught napping, and Johnny Paneer wuanee - Parsons should not have been z {played in the game against Cali November 4, the date of the clash fornia, and the U. of W. is perfect- One of the very best trapshots in this country is Frank M Troeb, lof Vancouver, Wash Mr, Troe sa very unassuming young man, always with a smile on his countenance, and he CAN shoot, He started out this year to |bag everything in sight, and he has done nobly He won high average honors in the championship shoot of the Sportsmen's Association of the Northwest, the Spokane Gun club, the Washington State tournament, the Lewiston, Idaho, program and Frank M. Troeh Portland Gun club. All he did at the Portland club was to break 199 out of 200 targets. In winning the high average at the Washington State shoot, Troeh This entitled him to shoot with the lchampion of every other state for lthe national amateur champlon- ship held in connection with the \Grand American tournament in St | Louis Outshoots "Em All | And Troeh outshot every one of lthe other 6 titleholders who faced the traps—in what many trap, | shooters think is the best event in | American trapshooting circles. Ev- ery shooter fs on the same mark— 16 yards—and every one has the same opportunity of winning. also won the state championship. | Cracking Clay Birds Comes Easy for This Washington Trapshot Troeh broke 79 targets before missing and then went the rest of the way—99 out of 100, the same score that won the title in 1914 and 1915, But this wasn't all that Troeh did at St. Louis. He finish-| @d second in the doubles cham-| pionship to Allen Heil, of Penn sylvania, getting 88 to Hell's 89. He broke 99 out of 100 in the Mound City Overture and was tied }for first with three others. Then jhe went out and broke 20 more jand won first place. He tied for |third, too, in the St. Louis Intro. ductory, with 195 out of 200. He shot so well during the week that he was high average shooter in the greatest tournament of the year. He broke 559 out of 600 targets all events, all distances, all angles. | Troeh has an average of better | than 96 for the shooting he has done this year. He averaged 96.34 for 2,050 targets last year, and in 1914 he averaged 93.74 on 2,430 targets. Trapshooting is the kings, and Troeh is kings, Trapshooting king of sports. sport of one of the is also the | “U” Strength Mark! Williams, fre: of W,, broke all record | Strength tests yesterday when be ing given his entrance examina tion. He was awarded 3,089 points The former record was held by Max Easkins, with 2,840. Frank |the t hman a Would Organize Amateur Hockey Amateur hockey players of the | eity met this afternoqg at the 8. A. C. for the purpose of Organizing an amateur hockey league, similar to those in Portland and Vancouver. Representatives from the Elks, Totem Athletic association and the Bankers were on hand So highly inflammable are some of the glittering trimmings now jused on women’s dresses that the |New York fire department suggests that they be condemned, (Paid Advertisement) “Tell it to Sweeney,” AN, MR, SQUIBB, ‘YOUR MODESTY LFEAR LEADS YOU To \ BUT YOUR SAILOR UNIRORM GING S YOU AWAY AND BE SUES — wHaT OF THs VIGTING CARD OF YOURS , BEARING YOUR NAME MR» SQUIBB, US*- ? (Copyright, Trade Mark a THIS SUIT? On UP WHER THEY KEEPUS Trey LNT US WEAR ANY Sucr WE WANT AND THAT Use Dow Mean ME GLORY ~~! Hastern Grid Coaches Admit They Are Up in Air; Yal BY H.C. H United Press fta NEW YORK, Oct ly shifting player ing here and there time ap- Proach for the hard contests, coaches of the big Eastern elev ens are all about ready to ad. mit today they have little idea of Who will be who in their elevens in the Saturday con- t Yale and Cornell are switch players with reckies# abandon, and Speedy Rush have de cided at the last me picked backfield w game against Dartmouth Yale Should Win Yale should win from Washing ton and Jefferson. But that isn't the point. Tad Jones wants his Blue warriors to do it with a cer tainty that will leave no room for criticism, and to gain that end he is trying all sorts of. experiments The ilineas of Chub Sheldon has had much to do with this, for it has been hard to find someone who will fit into his place. Scant materia) fs on band forthe tackles, and it AMILTON 26.—Wild- experiment- seems to nent that his 1 not start the Coach Reseburg of Franklin ts looking for a sound drubbing his team when it lines up again the Broadway squad, Friday after noon at Dugd: ark Franklin has only one le from the last year's team Frank Townsend is the only eran, Franklin has a heavier line than In previous years, but | r man tain | C should, according to Coach Rese- vi In former years, the Rainier Valley school depended upon the forward pass for most of its Son of Former U. S. President Becomes | Regular at Yale Charley Taft, son of former President Taft, has been made ir center of the eleven. Taft played end and halfback last year and was playing tackle early this season. Three men trying for center, Calla- han, Vorys and Smith, were in- jured and Taft was trie W. Seattle Midgets Lose Final Contest The West Seattle midget football schedule w brought to a close yesterday at Dugdale park, when they went down to defeat at the hands of Franklin's little fellows, 40 to 0, \fensive machine with the grand ag) Bundles of Gloom! Reseberg Can’t See Anything in Life ) cleve by HO. Miah Tine U & Pet. Oftien? BY BUD FISHER. ( YOU $G@ THE Docrors ) LABEL US WITH THe \ NATURE OF OUR AILMENT, THAT WSN: stands | ca) From “Unsare ees) Ss 1 TO DO FANCY e Should Win doesn't leave a great deal to choose, Art Gates, who has been at end for two seasons, now finds| himself a tack Baldridge, right tackle, has been limping so badly he probably will watch Saturday's! games from the side lines. Emil Jacq lack of form has earned him a seat as a lookeron also, and Jim Praden will be given a chance at fullback. Mose a veteran end eing given a ce at that! position | Harvard Easing Up | Harvard {# letting up on the driving practice that has been a feature for two weeks. Coach Sharpe at Cornell still ts changing his players from one po- in the hope of! « combination. | been running the has been placed at in Benedic place, and ght halfback in finding Sheed second t ba’ stron. a » either as an offensive or de gregation of a year ago. yardage, but no one on the present | s capable of handling the/| Waltenberg ball successfully. The only thing that Franklin will use Friday will| As a special feature of the open- be the old system of smashing the jing of the ice skating season to- Une. night, the Arena secured Miss Hala Coach Reseburg does not believe |Kosloff and Carl Waltenberg, {a- Carl ‘et-/ that Franklin will have a chance to|mous Russian skaters, fresh from| repeat her performance of two|skating successes in California, to the | years ago, when the Valley school |Rive exhibitions in the art of fancy ure skating every afternoon and }team is not playing together 8 it) held Broadway to a tie score unt{) |skating during the opening week of | evening. 4 the last half minute of play. the Seattle rink. In Reseburg’s opinion, Broadway| Miss Kosloff and Waltenberg are has too good a team for his men|proud possessors of silver medals and the best that he hopes for is|tied with exposition ribbons, pre- a 40 to 0 score. sented them by G. A. Howard, pres- Grand Opening | 2 LOMBARD'S FULL ORCHESTRA Ice Skating Season Tonight, Oct. 26 SPECIAL Exhibitions of Fancy Skating Hours, Daily, Except Sunday—Morning, 10 to 12; Afternoon, 3 to 5; Evening, §:15 to 10:30, | MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL SKATER The Men YouAdmire are the men who wear Cheasty’s Clothes $15 to $50 “Values Tell” STEPS AT ARENA and Hala Kosloff jident of the San Diego fair, in be half of the fair management, at the close of their engagement in the South last week. The two will give exhibitions of |pair skating, dance steps and fig- — Miss Kosloff is the world’s most beautiful girl on the ice. Her home is in Russia, but on account of the — war she was forced to come to this” \country over a year ago, She is not only good looking, but like her countrywoman, Pavlowa, can dance perfection itself’ on the frozen surface. Lombard’s band will play after. noon and evening. Skating will start at 8:15 tonight. 0. A. C. Eleven Will | Have Rest Saturday The Oregon Aggies will be ing Saturday unless something is done the last minute They have tried to line up a contest for that date, but so far have been unsuc- cessful, Only One Big Game Set for Saturday The Whitman-Washington game | is the only big college affair in the ' Northwest billed for Saturday afters noon. iM DOLLAR SHIRTS DUTCHESS TROUSERS EVERWEAR HOSIERY FALL HATS AND CAPS il i i ear ‘ ap XN >a os hall ome 1) , ny rs lia wi wlll One look at a Singerman $15 Suit or Overcoat will tell you more than a page of advertising copy. We in- vite you to take that look, with the guarantee that they are the best values you will find anywhere for the money. THAT Live ive. Phird and Pike Tomorrow The Regular $1.50 Cooper Underwear winter weights Per Garment $y Established 42 Years