The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 28, 1916, Page 9

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LisTen, GOT To HAVE OVER COATS TK Go WW OH YO -tve VCALLUPIN & MINUTES An ST Go Our ROPRIE TOR WiLL im THE BULOING ang on AN 0 Ne WILLIE ME ne very fi Francisc Dr rank himse! amland After that slowed That 1s near as the however lion at feeding time and shot carrier that would have weaken before they did Farmer was on a couple of occasions and is his regular stock in trade BOUT KEPT FANS IN ROAR ! | OF MERRIMENT THRUOUT H While Willie w slugging the) battling logger around the ring tn he third and fourth rounds, the} rig of fans was holding its hes and laughing industriously at | fe antics of the whirling, slashing, | hing, slugging Californian. “MUFF” BRONSON SURE iS CLASSY YOUNGSTER “This Bronson ts certainly a classy bid,” said Frank Purcell last night, following the battle of the Portland lad, in which he had it on Joe Harrehan at every angle of the game, and defeated him for the Northwest featherweight title in a round and a half of boxing. REFEREE AUSTIN RIGHT TO STOP THE MELEE Not a single murmur went up when Lonnie Austin stopped; the Bronson-Harrahan fracas !n the second round. Harrahan had all the appeararige of being out on his feet and Bronson stepped back and refused to hit him. The Portland school boy made a very good impression and pears that there will be some little difficulty experienced in securing a boy in these parts that can give rim a real battle. | ! BARD AND VAISE BOX | LOW DRAW i Adie Hubbard and Frenchy! ise, old favorites, fighting as| erweights, went four slow| rounds to a draw. There were} those in the audience that thought Valse should have had the better of the argument, however. LEO HOUCK WINS FROM HIS HEAVIER OPPONENT | Nick Sugar proved a punching bag for Leo Houck in their melee at catchweights. The clever Houck | tipped the beam at 130, while the Everett mitt slinger was five! pounds heavier. Sugar’s smeller ous to count during the entire four | | By using G. N. P. 8. 8. Co, Fast Boats from Portland TO CALIFORNIA Berth ana Meals on Boat But 24 Hours at Sea r to Ship's Side Information cP. A. A. Tinling, A. G. F. & P. A, GP. A. RE, WINTER IS NEAR ANDWEVE LL S STORE AND TRY one OV ANID ON THE WEY T MAIL, m IVE COT AN OFF Ke Xe LET Me Come our LIM THE COAT OW, SEE? YreN THC MECLP You the the end of Hully gee! I ran into one of that bird’s kes in the very beginning of the fight Meehan did not use his famed “windmill punch” except} was the target for blows too numer-| E that Howard Miller will be out of the game all s coaches are ™ Gor A ScHeme, OD Ask IF Me. Jones, BRONSON WIN BOUTS ATDREAMLANDSHOW BY EDWARD HILL RANK FARMER, the Kapowsin logger,| near defeating Willie Meehan, o heavyweight, last night at It doubtful, however, if lf knows it until he reads this batt which Meehan four r ds, he said: is won me up a lot.” lumberjack came to winning, ¢ native son came back as strong as a circus) self, aye, unto all within hearing: some lefts to Farmer's food) ed many other gladiators long} | then it was not the one that} rounds. It was easily Houck's fight. CASEY LOSES TO SAILOR BOY ON FOUL The Sailor Denley-Harry Casey bout came to an untimely ending tn the second round, when Casey un-| intentionally slipped a stiff poke in| below the skipper’s belt | Until the bout was stopped tt} was about even and promised to be a siam-bang affair, Tho boys are to be rematched “RED” MORGAN BEAT “MARTY” FOLEY IN FIRST GO “Red” Morgan bad the better of the going with “Marty” Foley, of Tacoma, in thelr four-round en- deavor. The Tacoma lad {s evt- dently new to the game, but with a little experience should develop into a good boy. The judge system was used last night, with Duncan McDonald, Chet Mcintyre and Ad Schacht handing im the papers. TAUSSIG AND FLANNIGAN DEPART SOUTHWARD Both “Moose” Ta . Manager of Meehan, and “Judge” Flannigan, Bronson’s legal adviser, were to de- part today for the South. Taussig goes to San Francisco and “Judge’ to Portland. Bronson remained tn Seattle and will be seen in action again as soon as a suitable oppon- ent is found for him. WILLIE HOPPE IN TOWN | FOR FRIDAY TILT | Willie Hoppe, king of the Frisco | four-rounders, was introduced at| last night's show. He bucks up| against George Ingle next Friday | night at the same locatfon, when the Metropolitan Lumbermen's club | puts on its boxing carnival | With A. Alonzo Stagg wearing | tweed knickerbockers and Bart MacComber sporting a wrist} watch, what is this old grid game| coming to anyway? o-¢ Mahan, Hardwick and Brickley, Barrett, Legore now looms up as the it all-round backfield star in the It 1s generally asserted that Yale has a greater team this year than at any time since Ted Coy wore the blue. «ee Howard Berry, the pantathion champion, who was on the Mexican border until recently, went through football drill with the Pennsylvania | | team last week. | The West Point eleven is doing a lot of training under electric lights. Captain McEwan seemed a bit over- trained and is taking a rest to re- cover some of his dash, one It has been definitely decided of Columbia on His because of an injured knee. lkicking was remarkable, and the biue and white stalwarts were de- pending upon him as one of the Greatest quarter-backs of the game. Harvard coaches were the first to | pass and carried the ball to Broad realize the importance of having as | way's team a|play, Btaw took the ball over on a Brickley or Mahan. Now other|forward pass for Franklin's only machines | score of the game. Diggs and|their success, the Rainier Valley | Broadway's stars, while Kfaw car- ‘team started to play Broadway off'ried off the Franklin honors, the matinspring of their building around their Shivericks, —— YES, T USUALLY HAE my COATS MADE To ORDER BUT ING BEEN Too BUSY , SOT Guess THis witt Hane Hauser, {ts star ond, started the half ended with th lin territory tional Portland featherweight. At the beginoir of third quar % ter, Franklin intercepted a forward | its feet, Broadway soon recovered, however, ind the greatest high STAR—SATURDAY, OCT. 28, 1916. PAGE MUTT AND JEFF—Of Course, Jeff Had to Spill the Beans (Copyright, 1916, by MH ©. Fisher, Trade Mark Rag. U. & Pat. Office) TT WAS For You bik, Bxcuse ME, SIR, HEAR THE PHONE 2 RUNGING SAID He WANTED YoU To \ . Between Ourselves BY THE SPORTS EDITOR 0 | oi Wow | YALE'S HARD ROAD | Yale now faces a highway of trouble thruout the rest of the beat.! There ten't a soft spot along the way, After W. & J, comes Colgate with one of her best teams, After Colgate comes Brown, with a well-primed machine, And after Brown follow Princeton and Har vard. An eleven that fy W. & J, Colgate, Brown, Pr ton and Hahvard on successive Saturdays has no die moments abead in which to partake of a picnic or a holida Rw et se REVISED AGAIN I shot a golf ball into the air; it fell to rth, | knew not where; 1 only knew, with woo intense, That sixty cents ts sixty cents. » 2 RR ww MAXIMS OF THE NINETEENTH HOLE It shall come to pass on some day that a golfer shall say to him- 1 scored this d. 1 played; yea, | might have been six strokes worse But that day shall be the last day of the world. Bt 8 oe Maulbetsch, the Human Mole, may have to burrow un derground this season, to get by the forwards at Syracuse and Cornell. And burrowing underground will be about four inches lower than he generally travels with the ball % 8 tt ss The Parade in Search of a Suitable Opponent for Jess Willard ts) Now Forming on the Right. far better than TT WAS YOUR CLERK, He RUSH RIGHT UP SraiRS AND SION AN URGENT CHECK On I FoRGor AbouT THAT CHECK. TLL HAVE TO RUSH RNY UPSTAIRS AnD SIGN IT. Excuse MG As Rah-Rahs Wi No HURRY! T To.d Your CLERK To BRING tr DOWN HERG ANd He SAID “AL RIGHT” ll Have Big Yell Festival in Easter BY H. C, HAMILTON U, P. Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 26,—With Dartmouth meeting Princeton, Harvard battling Cornell and Yale facing Washington & Jef- ferson, there should be enough college to make a nole the Far West hear It. Cornell stands a better chance of oming thru victorious than any of the other tesma booked to do stunts with the “Big Three.” Tho Ithaca gang has not jost a game tn more than two years, and this year no opponents have scored on them. Percy is Preparing Haughton, the Harvard sach, thinks enough of Cornell's chances to make considerable prep- sration for the struggle. He had his warriors locked up yesterday in secret practice and he is ex pected to turn loose som plays today that he had saved for the benefit of Yale only. cared to only Percy Neele The Dartsmouth eleven this year will rely giant to hold down the le‘t tackle rugged on a one-armed position. He is Neeley, the find of the season at the New Hampshire school. His right arm was ampu tated at the elbow, the result of an accident in his youth. Early accounts of the Dart mouth team in action indicate that Neeley is a terror on the line and will be one of the prize line nen of the East this season Neeley uses the stub of his maimed arm with telling ef fect in blocking and straight arming. ONE-ARMED STAR HELPING DARTMOUTH BROAD WA Y WINS CONTEST Rainier Valley Boys Give| 7 ravie Davis Will Good Battle to | Meet Frank Burns sn | in Ring on Friday Willie Ritchie Asks Bout Be Postponed meron SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, 28,—In BEST GAME OF YEAR Travie Davis will give Frank |i page mape caused Burns a chance in the ring with lie Ritchie to ¢ a postpon The Broadway high team de him ment of his bout with Johnny Me feated the Franklin squad by Following the publishing of Carthy in El Paso, scheduled for the score of 21 to 6, Friday Burns’ letter in The Star Fri vember 4 Ritchie wired afternoon at Dugdale’s park. It | gay, challenging the Everett [promoters that he would prefer t was easily the best high school lightweight, Davis has consent- | box November 1! game played this season. | Broadway minus the services of ed to be matched with the local welterweight and will clash with him as the semi-windup to ame with a rush, scoring her| the Hoppetngle-bout to be put first two touchdowns in the first} on next Friday night at Oream- eight minutes of play. After the] tand. Pine Strest school had scored her Matchmaker Walsh, of second touchdown, Franklin sud-| the Metrepolitan Lumbermen's denly came to Ife and began to| club, announces that he will furnish the Broadway team with} also have a boy on hand that | gome real opposition. The first will furnish some opposition for ball in Frank “Muff” Bronson, the sensa line. On the next) school game of the season was on The ball was kept in the center of | the field the rest of the game. Gribble and La Fray were 16-yard Encouraged by No; billiard match, JOHNNY KLING LOSES Reason defeats King (head line), wasn't revolution; just a DO YOU KNOW Seattle billiard parior Come in and see. has in the the finest world? BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor n Grid Circles |. Princeton {8 not in the same boat with Harvard by any means, except in that Speedy Rush's long countenance has taken some of the pep out of the Jungle town rooters At old Nassau, they are Dartmoutn's solid backfield, erans all, will be unable to plerce the defense that Tufts discovered was something in the stone wall line, Princeton has a good defense, a grand ight backfield, but a poor offensive at the However, Eddie Driggs is one of tho best punters the East ever has seen, and by bis own efforts could, in a nf! conf vet pinch, work the oval to a going from which Dave Tibbott might try a field goal Field goaling has come to be a hobby of Dav bbott's. Yale faces a hard task. For two year sue th Washing jton & Jefferson team has wander- | of the /¢d Into New Haven for a few hours | and returned to Washington, Pa, with the long end of the score. Previous to that Washington & Jefferson had played Yale to a | scoreless tih If the Pennsylvania eleven is able to put across a victory today {t will have the distinction of be ing the only team with the excep- tion of Harvard to trample the n eeiOn. that Rot } coach, has a size too | large for his face in the game with | Pittsburg this afternoon at Pitts jburg. After ng a grand show ing against Penn State a week ago, Folwell has been busy figuring out to down Glenn Warner's Army and Navy have com- paratively easy games today, the former being scheduled with Villa Nova at West Point and the Navy with Georgia at Annapolis HORSE SHOW IN SOUTH IS ON PORTLAND, Oct. 28.—Cham- plonships in several cl; will be decided this afternoon and tonight at the Horse Show, which is belng staged here by the Portland Hunt club, | The opening evening was given over principally | to a display of style, the famous exhibitions of Madison Squa Garden being acres of solid packed in galler rivaled Portland society, by jes and boxes During the polo pony event the crowd got a thrill when one of the |horses stumbled and threw his jrider. The man was uninjured. Credential, the jumper, of Van- couver, B. C,, got over the bar at 6 feet 8 inches, considerably under the world record. The Jenkins stables of Portland won most of the blue ribbons last night. CALIFORNIA MIXES ON » Rip BERKELEY, Cal., Oct. 28,— Determined to give California a hard fight, but declaring there Ie hardly a chance of victory, the Occidental college football eleven prepared today for thie afternoon's game with Callfor nla at California field. Despite this lack of confidence on | Oceidental’s part, Head Coach Andy Smith of California has been taking no chances, and for a week ha been putting the squad thru a stiff drilling y 8 game {is looked upon by | students as a test They believe |that unless the squad shows speed nd class today, it might as well abandon hope of making any show- ing against Washington on Novem- ber 18, San F rancisco Bald Tosser Takes Wife SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28,—Wal- ter (Biff) Schaller, Seal outfielder, Jand Mrs. Anna Lillian Dutrow will be married here tonight HAYES IS WINNER ST. LOUIS, Oct, 28 Chic Hayes beat Jabez White in a iz night round mill Fri Cornell would like to make it two smashing game. | BY BUD FISHER. RIVAL COA WATCH U ‘ TODAY'S GRID MIX — | Football Games On Today I? 1 Yale vs, Washington and 1} Princeton | Army vs i} ve. Dartmouth, Albright Georgetown, at Washington, D. C, Brown Rutgers, at Providence, | Columbia vs. Williams, at New York. ? Franklin and Marshall vs. Penn State vs. Gettysburg, i} Rhode Island 5 Springfield Y. M. C. A. vs. Colgate, at Springfield. i Swarthmore vs. Ursinus, at Swarthmore. Pittsburg vs, Pennsylvania, at Pittsburg. ; West vs. Syracuse, at Tufts, Dame vs. ana VS Notr 5 Mi ) Northwestern vs. Drak ) Purdue vs. Illinois, at La: Kansas vs. Kansas Aggies, ‘ Nebraska vs, ? at Creighton vs. Denver, at Omaha. ) California vs, Occidental, at Berkeley. ‘ Cincinnati vs. Kentucky, at Cincinnat!. }? Nevada vs. Utah Aggies, at Reno. a vs | v Missouri, at | An ideal day, more suitable for baseball than football, was served up by the weatherman | today for the clash this after- | moon between the gridiron | gladiators of the University of Washington and Whitman col- lege, scheduled for 2:30, on | University field. | Coach “Nig” Borleske came to | town with a bunch of crippled ath | letes Thursday morning, but it was noted t most of the alleged crips” had discarded their per pbulators to and when the la Walla football mentor gave out his lineup, a number of those | supposed to be hobbling around on | crutches were among those present. | Gil Remains Quiet | Coach Gilmour Dobie was quiet as the proverbial clam today before the encounter, altho all during the practice session he has been yelling about how weak his crew is this year. The thing sizes up about as it has in years agone. Washington will use just enough tricks out of its bag |to make the game interesting, and at the same time hand a defeat to v the Missionaries from across the ridge. Rally Is Held A big y was held before the game. Members of the alumni paraded the downtown section. The | lineups, given out by the coaches, | follow: Washington, Whitman. | Faulk . L, E.. . Hanson Grimm : . « Groom Morrison .....L. @ Comrade Johnson «+ Traut Wick or L, Smith C | Seagrave (Capt.) R.G.. oR. T Murphy . - Busch G. Smith . De Grief | Johnson . .Q. Hoover (Capt.) Gardner L. H Gensel Hainsworth F . Botts George Varnell, Spokane sports editor, will referee; Plowden Scott, of Portland, will umpire, and Coach |Reseburg of the Franklin high Smoke in a row from Harvard to prove that last season's victory was not a fluke, EAST Harvard vs. Cornell, at Cambridge. Villanova, at West Point. Navy vs. Georgia, at Annapolis. Connecticut Aggies, at Kingston. Indianapolis. Wabash, at nesota vs. Iowa, at Minneapolis. Nebraska Wesleyan, at Lincoln. Colorado Mines, at Laramie. “Values Tell” why we are busy selling the smartest and best in Clothing CHES TO . OF W. IN Jefferson, at New Haven. at Princeton, Dickinson, at Lancaster. at State college. Ann Arbor. South Bend Evanston. yette. at Lawrence. Norman. | sehool, Seattle, will be head ines man. The game this afternoon will be closely watched by three other | coaches of big college elevens— | California, Oregon and the Oregon Agzies. Washington takes on ell three this fall, | Joe Gorman Given Draw With Colored | Boxer in Portland PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 28.—_ Joe Gorman, the Oakland boxer, was credited with a draw today in his fight with | Lee Johnson, negro feather. weight champion of the Coast, but many believe the negro beat him, Johnson appeared te know more about the game, Frankie Sullivan, of Les Angel got the verdict over Delaney, negro lightweight, when the latter quit in the fourth round. | Washington State to Meet Oregon Nov. 11 While Washington and O. A, C. are tangling here on November 11 Washington State and the gridiron | warriors of the U. of O. will be | battling on Multnomah field, Port | land, Yougotta admit John McGraw’s a great manager, but he’s no strong- jer than Harry Hempstead’s check book. Ever notice how the little colleges are frozen out, even though they whip the big fellows at football? There is always the flock of alibis | of how the big bugs lost—never an explanation that the smaller fry whipped them, wife, fr she’s jury an’ the verdick’s shore t’ be a pipe of VELVET an’ smoothness helps make the rough spots even. And two years? natural ageing makes VELVET omooth,

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