The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 11, 1916, Page 7

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i STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 11, 1916. PACE 7 —— {OF CourRsG Some | PROFLE MAY WOT APPROVE OF MY TNE BEEN TRYING FOR TWO WEERS To GET AN ae RCOAT AND BY Goucy "GONNA GET ONE TODAY, T Katow HOw To Ger ONE Too! THASS ALL! METHOD OF GETTING Vv, BUT BY Gum 1™% GONNAGET ONE TODAY WELL, MUTT, L FINALLY é0°r a Coar! Like World’s Series Times as Town Awaits Big Gridiron Classic BY H. C. HAMILTON would have shamed the average, U. P. Staff Correspondent world's series speculator. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 11.—A| | Bore up by the nowledge that 4 once has the er goal line reding evoone ag ge per | felt the weight of an allen foot this Dright sunbdeaming in spite of tt | fact that Princeton ts represented and a frosty chill in the alr that/fact that Princeton ts represeted made overcoats mighty comfort-|>y the best team to, {nhabit Old able gave Cambridge a double dose | Nassau in years, Princeton stu of mixed weather early today as | ents and alumni are covering bets this town awaited the beginning of | With reckless abandon. Odds of the annual gridiron clash between | 10 to 7 and 10 to 8 on Harvard Harvard and Princeton. | were being offered and grabbed by Approximately 5,000 |the student contingent. Princeton from out of town whirled into Bos. | {*, ona, HE arab ees ome ton today from every spot neambdy | baevarg lt aa te = ry and many of them from far away. | nade the jue te as oR Tt ts estimated that 35,000 persons | 'e largely ause jof Percy Haughton. will be in the huge Harvard) 11 the excitement attending the Stadium when the referee's whistle first clash between two of the Big Starts the hour of supreme strU€!mree, the football public h gle between the two great teams. | ost “overlooked the fact. that at Like World’s Series | New Haven Yale is scheduled for Hotels snd restaurants were another of its hard games when jammed and packed in a way rem-| Brown's powerful eleven makes {ts Iniscent of world’s series times. It! appearance at the Yale bowl. ‘was almost impossible to find a/ Brown, always strong, looms this theatre seat, and those that were | year as the one team likely to do offered had prices on them that | things to Yale's great record. THE LINEUPS | Washington. | Mayfield Pee | Bighty-etx players and three Abel . RE.. | umpires have been reserved by Murphy Q President Blewett and clube In Noble LH the Northwestern league for the Johnson ....R. H Witite T| season of 1917, according to the Hainsworth ..F Newman |) official report which has been THE OFFICIALS j announced from the office of Plowden Stott, Portland, ref- eree; Stanley Borleske, Port- |! land, umpire; Walter Reseburg, || Seattle, head linesman. J. H. Farrell, secretary of the Minor Leagues’ association. Vancouver has the heaviest list of reserved players. Bob Brown turned fn the names of 20 men who are held under Vancouver reserve Tacoma follows Vancouver, with The average depth of the ocean 4s 12,000 feet, and the vernge | the second largest list of players.| Vancouver's reserve list includes height of the land above the sea Elghteen horsehide chasers were |the names of five suspended mem. fs 1,500 feet. lreported on the City of Destiny | bers, three of whom were mixed up| i roll. jin the “stri during the soa Butte reserved 13 players for|son, while the other two « nd-} | next season, while Seattle kept/ed players refused to report last | jstrings on 12 players, with Great | spring. | | | pannnn| “Ching” Johnson, U. of W. Star | HOTEL 621 JACKSON 8T, 250 —ROOMS— 250 —Running ice water In every room. Absolutely fireproof, —Beautifully furnished; Im. proved telephones in every [| 5T- PAUL, Nov. 11—In one of the greatest bouts ever staged in room. aged _ i this part of the country, Mike Gib Nard, Conventent for shop Bisons, St. Paul, handed Jack Dillon, Indianapolis, a neat trimming. From The Finest Popular. J} the very first tap of the gong un- iced in the til the last, Gibbons demonstrated Pri * Hotel in that be was a past master of fade- United States jaway boxing He would rush tn hand the Indianapolis man a series of punches, and then fade away be- fore Dillon could get his heavy ar. tillery in action. In the first round the men met, and, like a shot from the clear sky, Gibbons landed a right to the face. In the second round Dillon came up looking rather dismayed. Dil lon in this round tried mighty hard to land bis famous knockout blow, but Gibbons made his attempts look 80 foolish that even the grim Dillon was forced to smile. In the third round Dillon seemed inclined to hang on. In the fourth, fifth, Prices 50c, 75c, $1.00 With Private Bath, $1.25 Transient—Weekly $3 to $a— Monthly $12 to $20, Private Bath, $22.50. We cordially Invite you to inspect our fine hotel. BUSCH HOTEL 621 Jackson St. sixth, the leading. At the How Do You Treat Your Savings Account? As deserving of attention AFTER all your wants are satisfied, or as a factor in your suc- cess which DEMANDS first consideration? On the way you can answer hangs, largely, the success you are destined to win. DEXTER HORTON TRUST SAVINGS BANK SECOND AT CHERRY SEATTLE, WASH. Combined Resources of the Dexter Horton National Bank and Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank, $19,040,479.68 of) 86 Ball Tossers Being | | Held by N. W. League) ‘Dillon Loses But Nearly CHEAPEST FARES | Scores K.O. Over Gibbons; sev-| enth and eighth, Gibbons did all) end of the} —4 Regular Duds When Their Baggage Fails to Arrive Coach Joe Pipa! of the Ore- gon Aggie football squad, could see nothing but defeat staring him in the face this afternoon, when his Corvallis team tan- gled, on the gridiron at Univer. was not much, The team's baggage |went astray, and the huskfes did) thetr stunts In their Sunday best,| which te no way to practice for a gridiron melee. Washington has two pounds the sity field, with the champion better of the argument b the} University of Washington | whistle blows, The Cor toam | eleven. averages 171 pounds. At that, Coach Joe didn't have anything on Gilmour Dobie, Wash. |tngton gridiron mentor. From the }eist of the lanky leader's conver jsation. it would appear that he don ned a patr of blue spectacles before watching his team go thru tts pre |minary practice yesterday, The Aggies worked out early in the aft ernoon and the locals in the even ing. Three Men Out | George Smith, Capt. Seagraves and Ben Mayfield are all reported being hors de combat for this 1ggle, #0 Dodie will have to rash |some of his reserves to the firing |Iine, The Oregon coach also will |miss the work of several freshmen| who participated in the game against Washington State. The Agsio workout yesterday | Falla responsible for the come] number, Spokane had the small est reserve list in the league, as! a reult of the many players who! were disposed of by sale before the} reserve lists were sent in President Blewett named Ralph Frary, W. F. Finneran and Harry |Howell as umpires. The three tn- \dicator holders were the men who finished out the 1916 season, and| Finneran and Howell worked the entire 1916 schedule for Blewett | with good results | Oregon Aggies Practice in | TO CALIFORNIA, eighth Dflion’s face was badly ——Clase—— puffed. First. Second. | In the ninth Dillon started rush-|San Francisco ... $12 $9 jing, and in the tenth Gibbons got|Loe Angeles ........ 19 14 |careless, and Dillon nearly put over|$an Diego +21 16 a knockout. | The Celilo, one of the Mo | Cormick Steamship Co.'s fast liners, | will sall Monday, November 13, for Southern California ports, Every convenience for passengers {8 pro-| vided, and the meals served are un- E ‘BEN HUR’ AT Y.M.C.A. | Mr. and Mrs, William Morton |surpassed, As there ts consider-| | Rasmus, dramatic readers, will give |able travel booking at present, it] Ja reading of the great scenes of|wiil be well to make reservations |“Ben Hur,” the biblical story by/at once. Full particulars at the | Lew Wallace, at the 3 p. m. meet-| Milwaukee ticket office, Second jing of the Y. M. C, A. Sunday clubjave. and Cherry st. Phone Elliott} tomorrow | 4n12 A. L. Tertsagian, a native of Ar- | Lindsay | menia, now an American citizen, will speak on the Armenian situa tion at the friendship sv pr of the Sunday club at 6:20 o’c Doctor assis, «> ° 14 ored n Free OPERA STAR IS WED TON. Y MUSICIAN} Tris could do to hit .383. NEW PANTAGES Matinees, 2:30—Nights, 7 and 9 (Copyright, 1916 by MH © Fisher Trade Mark Ning U. & Pat Officar AND Qurre Some COAT TOO, CONSIDERABLE CoAT. HOW DID you eer iret 'LINCOLN WINS IN GRID MIX Led by their star quarter, Ray Eckmann, the Lincoln High football tearn defeated the Franklin eleven by the score of 7 to 0, Friday afternoon, at | Dugdale’s park. The game was a #lam-bang exhi- BY BUD FISHER. bition from start to finish, with the North end school being on the strong side thruout the entire four quarters, Lincoln made tts only score of the game in the second quarter, when {t took the Franklin squad off their feet for a couple of minutes, rushing the ball down the field by off-tackle plays | £ekmann, the Lincoln quarter, |was the individual) star of the game, bis end runs standing out as a distinctive feature. Townsend of Franklin outpunted Wilson of Ldme coln by a big margin “Cully” Wilson Is Ready for Hockey | “Cully” Wilson, the demon Se attle ice hockey star, is back im the city, ready for bis nopular win ter pastime. Pete Muldoon is ex pected here next week. Director | Lester is now in Vancouver. p>? ——1JU Between 1 Ourselves BY THE 6PORTS EDITOR A FOOTBALL STORY (Magazine fiction writers kindly note.) Upon the sidelines, grim and set, Tho substitute kept guard; His vision followed each rough drive That ripped off yard by yard; Up in the stands his girl looked down And waved a flag of green, While waiting for her hero’s form To fash upon the scene. The score stood 7 points to 3 Amid the bitter fray, With only seven minutes left To save the waning day; When, lo! Or worddé to that effect, The regular was thrown So buoyantly against the ground He smashed his collarbone. The substitute rushed to the job With murder in his eye; Whereat the girl up in the stands Evolved a happy sigh; The cheering section called his name And clamored, “Oh, you kid!” And this, within the short space left, Is what our hero did— He fumbled stx or seven punts That took a spiral steer; He miased four tackles by a yard While sprawling on his rear; Ho did his best-—dut that was not Enough to bag the loot; precisely why ho was Which BUGGESTIONS TO THE NATIONAL LEAGUE In place of spending the tmpending winter in an outburst of words bullt Into passionate oratory— In place of using up tho time tn league politice— Consider these figures In the last seven years the National league has won one world series, and the American league has won six In the last two world series the National leaguo has won two games out of 10. This will be enough to keep more than one person fairly busy. % oo tt 8 WHY? When Freddie Welsh's opponent failed to show up, last week, the crowd was disappointed. | % 8 8 Out was the name of a horse that started at Windsor. the guys that bet on him. So were 3 8 8 Bob Fitzsimmons was insulted. New York police asked him to tell them about a negro five feet tall who beat him up 8 ts tt Wonder if that Tommy who captured 102 Germans surrounded them. tt ot 8 et tte The sensational run of 101 yards by “Tuffy” Conn, the Oregon Ag-| ie halfback, against the University of Nebraska eleven on Multnomah field, Portland, October 21, 1s in line to head the list of long-run statis. tics for the 1916 season. The longest run recorded tn the East is 100 yards, by Moss of Rensselaer Poly. * i tt i I tt GOLF AND THE BATTING EYE Further proof that golf injures tho batting eye was offered last eason wit The ball player who played moro golf than any other big leaguer was Tria Speaker, of Cleveland, and look what it did to him! It was all ——— a | Bi Horse Show Is_| BULL BROS. | pid Tonight in N.Y. Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN 1043 NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—More| —ae——— {| than $0,000 in prizes will be award-| ed to winners in the 21st annual show of the National Horse Show association, which will open to- night in Madison Square Garden. Successful Race Meet Is Expected) SAN DIEGO, Cal. Nov. 11.— \What promises to be the most suc- cessful racing meet ever held in this section opened this afternoon at has In the finest the world? That Geattie | billiard parlor | Come in and see. | BROWN & HULEN Second and Spring Third Floor] the Tia Juana race track, just . across the Mexican border, tn) Lower California. Virtually all the jhorses which were raced in the| recent meeting at Reno have been | shipped here | there was considerable talk of send |to the date of the tnterclub meet |Co-eds Are Pretty Chorus Girls in | ; BEC First Appearance Broadway Mrs. Harry Brainerd Mrs, Brainerd, formerly Olive Fremstad, grand opera prima don- na, recently married Harry Brain erd, New York musician and mem ber of a noted Connecticut family This is her second marriage, NNING MONDAY MATID MME. HESSE SPROTTE Seattle's Favorite Contralto Earl Cavanaugh & Co. in “MR. INQUISITIVE” Big Movie Musical Comedy with a Bevy of Senator Francis Murphy The Famous German Comedian Other Big Acts—10c and 20c Vaudeville Show. Renutiful university co-eds gam. |boled on the stare in regular Win- ter Garden fashion Friday night, when the Junior Girls’ annual v deville show was presented, “Junior Review” was the head line act, and was a comic opera written by two students, Harold Allen and Donald Wilson. Two thousand people saw the show, tn ny hall | vin in Vaudeville of Catch ”” was a catchy song num- ber, sung by Mary Wright Beauties ARABIA WANTS KING? WASHINGTON, Nov, 11, ce state department has received a cable from Meeca purporting to of. ficlally announce the establishment; of a king of Arabia. Se * | the Bride's |f] Crackerjack Mitt Card Is Lined Up by Moosers for Wednesday Evening who held his own with Freddy Welsh; Lioyd Madden, the former Far Western amateur champion; “Muff” Bronson, Northwestern featherweight champion; George Ingle, whose draw battle with the mighty Willie Hoppe is still fresh in the public mind; Travie Davis, whose last battle in Seattle with Madden was one of the best four- round scraps ever staged here, and Leo Houck, who held bis own re cently with Lee Jobnson, the Coast featherweight champ. All these boys on one bill. And in ad- dition to this, there ts Danay Ed- wards, Coast Myweight champ, in a bout with “Young” Coggins, of Everett. Ingle has been working for his scrap with Davis every afternoon at 2:30 at Austin & Salt's. He bas been boxing with Bronson, who is also getting in shape there for Leo Houck. Bronson has fought Leo three times and declares that this | time it is curtains for Leo, PALACE Tomorrow 1 to 11 p.m HIPPODROME ROAD SHOW NO. 14 The Original Four An Exceptional Quartet “In Harmony Galore” The O’Mar Sisters Am Aerial Fashion Show Bertram-May Co. Comedy Sketch “His Nobs” Puchini Bros. Singers and Musicians Hoey & Bellew “In An Unusuality” As a general rule in this seo- tion a boxing smoker consists of one main bout between a couple of good boys and four preliminaries. Judging from the card which the Moose have slated for their smoker next Wednesday night at Dreamland they have changed this idea and have four main bouts and only one preliminary. “Muff” Bronson The preliminary which is be tween George Ross and Roy Hus- sey of Everett looks like a swell bout. Starting fro mthe top, ever? boy in the first three bouts has at one time furnished part of a head- line event here. Harry Anderson, the Northwest lightweight champ Harry Hannah Is Home for Winter Marry Hannah, former Spokane Indian backstop, now with Salt Lake, In the Pacific Coast league, {s back home in Seattle for the winter. Harry had a very good season in the Coast circuit, and ing him to the big show. Multnomah Athletes | Arrive Week Ahead Due to some misunderstanding as | AND EARL NETTIE Flynn & McLaughlin i Musical Comedy Patr (Late of Rector’s, New York) Monday, Tuesday and between the Multnomah club of Wetaesier Portland and the 8. A. O. grapplers|fa “The Test” Jane Grey Geo, Lamon’s Palace Hip on and boxers, Eddie O'Connell and four athletes are on their way home today. They arrived at the S, A. C yesterday a week ahead of the schedule. Benny Leonard Is Winner Over Stan} NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—Stanley Yoakum, the Denver cave man, caved in last night tn his bout with Benny Leonard, local lightweight Leonard scored a clean knockdown} in the eighth round. knocker it means that somebody that’s out is tryin’ t? get in. An’ same way with most other knockers. pe O~-need to’ “knock” where your pro- duct’s right. Just tell the facts. Eve bit of VELVET is naturally aged two years to make it the smoothest smok- ing tobacco.

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