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tp Bee Dr. Edwin J. Brown D. Loox ar THAT Poon. Urrreg CHIKD, CRYING AYIF MS MEART WOULD BREAK. LITYLE THINGS “MEAN SO MUCH To A CHILD THAT AGE. LE ASK HIM 1 WHATS The MATTER & Boo | Hoo! Boo! Hoo! Boo, Hoo! STAR—MONDAY, NOV. Mars eer ALWAYS SAVE YouR PENNIES. ~ Don't SRY LOY TLe CHAP TUL Give You 4aD Two PENNIES AND T LOST One, T WAS SAVING rem UPL ANCIENT AMATEUR RULE TO BE GIVEN SLAP AT MEETING MCULOUS ru ations ateur athletic as ling which have f wrced dozens of thletes into professionalism or out of may be given a : acts : Y @)\ clubs, headed by ¢ Woodland b of = io Boston, make a fight against the United States Golf associat f ¢ reinstatement of Francis Ouimet, J. H. Sullivan, jr, and Paul Tewksbury Other amateur ass are expected to follow this lead Amateur records of the past few years show that ar- bitrary rulings have driven fr teur ranks some of the greatest athletes of all times OREGON MAY LOSE TACKLE TO UNCLE SAM Brooke, University of Oregon Ag who played right tackle Saturday in the game against Washington, may be lost to Joe Pipal’s squad at any time. Brooke is a second lidutenant at he Corvallis institution, and Is inutely expecting a call to the cv! His father {s a major in the army. OREGON FAILED TO SCORE | IN TWO CHANCES ' © A. C. had two score in Saturday's they lost on University field to Coach Gil Dobie’s championship U of W. squad, 35 to 0. One was on an intercepted forward pass in tne first quarter, when Low carried the ball to the locals’ eight-yard line, | Dut were foiled when Dobdie’s men held them to three down and Hub held them to three downs and Hub- short. In the last few minutes of play a pass from Hubbard to Moist netted O. A. C. 24 yards, but the ball ‘was brought back for a penalty, and/ the whistle ended the melee before | the Corvallis boys got in action} again. CANADIAN BOXING CHAMP WOUNDED IN WAR Fred Welsh, winner of both Charles Tobin, tho clever and f 105-pound Canadian boxing and, wing of the Portland ice hoc wrestling titles in 1911, when George! team, ts on his way c harley White Signs Up for Five Tough Bouts in the Ring), CHICAGO, Nov. 13 —Chariey White faces a solid month's work with the announcement today by Nate Lewis, his man- ager, that five bouts, two of them to be the hardest in White's ring career, had been signed for the near future. He will fight Jack Britton at Boston 12 rounds to a decision November 21. Benny Leonard aiso signed up for any number of rounds from 6 to 20 before the club that offers the best inducements, The bout will be staged within eight weeks. Other fights are: Johnny Lustig, 18 rounds, at Providence, R. |., November 23; Jimmy Murphy, 6 rounds, at Philadelphia, November 27, and Frankie Callahan, at Boston, 12 rounds. Portland Hockey chances ¢ game, which the} pions at the Vancouver Ath) ub, Hes in a hospital “somewhere |\¢ the railroads stop running tra! France,” seriously wounded, ac decision to come West {is {nflex cording to advices received by his He ts driving bis motor car mother, Mrs. J. W. Welsh, himeelf, and when last heard NEW BASEBALL LEAUGE was in Kansas City and going 18 PROPOSED mre. - Plans for a new baseball circuit in Kansas and Oklahoma have been FLorse Couldn’t Make started in Top The proposed circuit is schednied to include Okla, Good With Circus but| Proved Wiz on Tracks tie | get to Portland homa City, Wichita, Topeka, Ty Joplin, Muskeegee, Fort Smith Springfield. Since both Wichita and| Topeka had a disastrous season last When Nat Ray, Toronto horse year in the Western league, it has|man, visited a circus about a year deen suggested that this league be ago, he was impressed with the made Class B. The 1 population jaction of one of the ring horses of its towns will be 430,000. The nagement told him the SATURDAY FOOTBALL horse was no good for a circus, and offered to sell him cheap. y trained the horse during the Washington Oregon Aggies 0.\* and won 16 races with him Santa C : anatoed on half-mile tracks, He called the f J ptorvengt horse Day Spring. er Day Spring's track activities seat statue % different from most horses, When he finishes racing in the States this | fall he will be shipped to Toronto] 2 {to campaign in ice the winter Willie Ritchie in a giz, |Draw With McCarthy EL PASO, Nov —Willie Rit |chie {s nursing a grouch today, after ja ten-round draw with Johnny Mc-| |Carthy of San Francisco. The for-! mer champion boxed at the Juarez bull ring. McKelvey High Gun at Harbor Island C. EB. e was high gun in both and 100-target shoot held Sunday at Harbor island. In| Michigan 20. Princeton 0 Oregon 12, Wa Gonzaga 8,M nington HIMSELF secs Dent ac for $16.00 clude extract! = apy / plan, all GET WELLe enny payment diseases. ¢ fi our on ultation free, Twelfth r, Dr. Macy, 203 mp.|the first event he cracked 48 out of lor Bide. M1% Bacond waa possible 50, and in the other 97. oe MEN I Can Save You Time and Money jecquse T determine your needa befe nptt ye I the and fees can be arra to "you iuirementa, CONSUUT “14 or 606 for Blood Disorders. Come to me for a Wasserman blood teat. DR, DORAWAT 202 Mberty Bids. Postetfics, ber of eastern golf! Player Has Auto, to the Coast, | Paris turned out a string of cham-|very deliberate and determined to! ¢ Tobin does not care} racing during | Between Ourselves BY THE SPORTS EDITOR FOOTBALL'S PSALM OF STRIFE le numbers * game » the left guard often si frame Tell me not in | umbers h a dozen on his arting, prints on @ rival's BR ft | CORPORATION BOOSTS ATHLETICS | The Goodyear Rubber company be athletic The company has spent thousands of dollars in a big athletic fietd| and to further Interest the men to take part notified all employes that men {njured tn any would receive full pay for all time they ount of their injuries jand stadium in Akron, O In athletic games recent regularly scheduled contest might be off from work on ac oo 8 8 WHAT WE READ AS WE RIDE Have you noticed, in wandering about this town of ours, the num. ber of people who read boc the street cars? I bare often wonder ed just what sort of literature men and women find interesting enough lto carry with them and read in journeying to and from business. \ The other tay I tried to keep track of what was being read in tran- felt. This ts what I saw | A very young gir! reading a book of Elinor Glynn's. | An old man reading George Barr McCutcheon's “Beverly of Grau stark | A middle-aged woman perusing Owen Meredith's “Lacile. | A young man with a book labeled “Wit and Wisdom of Woodrow Wilson.” A young man reading Thackeray's “Pendennis.” } A young girl reading O. Henry's “The Four Million csi: ES a | FABLE One time there was a lightweight boxer who didn’t quibble about Yes, he's dead ot 8 8 oe made a bid for the Welsh-Kilbane bout. need publicity pretty bad. | MoM 8 oe ee Frank Moran doesn’t seem to care what becomes of him. it Fred Fulton. two ounces Ir weight Toledo h tt tt 8 8 te Baliplayers must be petted, says Bill Sweeney. petting @ guy nat ned Sweeney? Critics Forced to Own ' It Looks Like Crimson Year on Kastern Grid) that it Who'd ever think BY H.C. HAMILTON [s looks like a New YORK. Nov. 13—Th East's big football teams, with single exception of Yale, to of Princeton's defeat, t the day's battle with Yale a big favor- stand today right at the pin /ite, Brown's victory at Now Haven nacle of their efforts. Even {was not exactly a surprise, but ft Princeton, beaten by Harvard, |was an awful comedown for the has some solace in the knowl- [ipiue. Yale will need @ lot of the edge that one of the best Tiger | Jo ‘son teams in years came nearly overturning a Harvard eleven that compares fairly well with # brand of help before to beat Ha | some recent wonderful Crim | Ballard Football ‘ie | 4 Brown, Navy, Pittsburg, Penns Team Wins Game }vania, Cornell and Harvard at day AIL-N: lthe happenings of last | The gridiron squad |with elation. Harvard {s deserving | went down to defeat Sunday at the| lof lots of commendation, and is| hands of the Ballard Meteors, 14 to| |getting it. As the time approaches /0, Both teams played a nifty brand for the big encounter between Har-|of the pigskin game, byt the Bal-| vard d Yale, it becomes more/jard boys had the class and more apparent that Percy} Haughton has forced the crit _'°| Spike Kelly Puts REAL PA NLESS' on Final Touches DENTISTS CHICAGO, Nov, 13.—Spike Kelly, local welterweight, {s doing the fin- |{hing touches for his scrap with | Bryan Downey, the Ohio sensation, Jat Kenosha, tomorrow night. Kelly, who has won his last seven bouts, ia expected to have his handa full with Downey, They will weigh in at 142 pounds pares, |\Cub Manager Is | Not Yet Named j{n order to introduce our new | |(whalebone) plate, which fs the lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover the roof of the CHICAGO, Nov, 12—Thone who expected the question of the man- agership of the Cubs to be threshed |mouth; you can bite corn off the out at the annual meeting here to- jcob; guaranteed 15 years. |day will be disappointed. Prest- Gold crown .....--+-++++++-$3.00 dent Weeghman said, shortly be- $15 net of teoth (whalebone) $8.00 fore the meeting convened, that It | would be only a routine affair, Tin $10 set of teeth ker'a fate will wait a while, Ac Bridge work, per tooth, gold & White crowns . Gold fillings Siiver fillings Platina fillings All work guaranteed for 18 years ve impreasion taken in the morn- Bxam- cording to We man, only routine business will come up | England Winner Over Scot Team and get teeth same day. Pngland won over Scotiand Sun- ination and advice free day at soccer, 3 to 2, when the an- Call ané Seo Some We Our Plate | nual international clash was put on key We Mand / at Dugdale field, Followers of the game favored the Scots to win, and the reault of the melee was a sur- e to Close students of the game SATION LAI EES | ‘Schumana-Heink SEAT SALE TUESDAY— MOORE Pe: et of our present om aly Cut - Rate “OHI Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY 0, Bppeaise On, believes in encouraging its men to/ Toledo must) He's to! Tigers should go into next Satur-| 13, 1916. PAGE (Copyriant, wow DONT go SPEND IT FoR. CANDY. No SiR, T wort Im SAWING UP To BUY me A 1916, by MO Fisher rede Mark Neg U. & Pat Officer | This Old Bird | Do Several Things Younger ¢ Ones Can’t Brickett, English athleta, J as old as he feels, rd of his work in cover+ es by different styles fi nut 49% he must be BY BUD FISHER. | Walter age 51, | and a reec econds Indic feeling pretty chipper. These were his performances ig thelr sequence Mile walk, 8 minutes 16 see onds. Mile run, over hurdies, 7 mine | utes 19 seconds. | Mile run, 7 minutes 10 see | onds. Two miles on bicycle, 7 min utes 13 seconds. Mile rowing, 8 minutes 32 seconds Mile swimming, 19% seconds, The hurdles were five in number, nd were 2 fest 6 inches high. 16 r ed torrents Just before Brickett made his start, and therefore his performance was all the more re markable on account of the adverse conditions for his land stunts. A year ago Brickett walked @ mile, ran two miles, cycled a =e rowed a mile and ma mile in 53 minutes 2 | When you have so hhh sell, list it in Star Want ‘ae and get result 15 minutes STARS. OF YESTERDAY ‘And What They Are Doing Now, | Joe Corbett as he looks today By E. L. MORIARTY SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. }the apex of his brilliant career, and years after figured in a couple! ‘Fans Will See Lively Bout When Houck and Bronson Mix in Ring Can “Muff” Bronson, sensational Portland featherweight, continue at the pace be set when he clipped Different Nowadays Joe Harraban on the jaw at @ fe A far cry from the quivers of @ | ¢« boxing show, and won the major league diamond; just an featherweight title of the Northwest | jring | from the Seattle bo: echo of the plaudits of an admiring a ¥? — a seem big league baseball throng. Boxing fans Shout tone lof come-back tents on the Pacif coast, jevenly divided on the question In a comfortable nine-room house | which will be answered on Wednes at 746 Fourth ave., San Francisco, |day night when the Rose City lives Joe Corbétt, his wife and|«ladiator takes on Leo Houck in @ ltheir seven children, These are|four-round clash at Dreamland, Cor-|Houck and Bronson have met on — several occasions, and reports of the fights that drifted here told of gory battles put up by the twe two boys and five girls. The bett family owns its own home and the parents’ greatest ambition is to lsee the children properly educated Four attend St. Agnes convent | youngsters. here, one {s a student in St. Igna-| One thing certain, Houck is going | tius oilege and one is a pupil at out to win, and win just as quickly |the Girls’ High school. The sev-|98 he is possibly able. Leo has Jenth {s too young to leave home as been yelping for a bout with Brome | yet. son in a Seattle ring ever since he lost the first melee in Portland to “Judge” Flannigan’s boy. Both boys are working out for Eight o'clock every morning sees the former diamond star hopping a street car. Joe is employed in the docket department of the county their battle at Austin & Salts clerk's. office. About fivethirty|sym. There is a good deal of rival jo’clock he returns bome, where a|TY between them, so they do their | quiet evening playing and &tudying | Work at different hours. with the children makes it a day.| Another bout that is causing con- Joe Corbett retains the quiet |Siderable comment {fs the Travie streak of humor which in bygone | Davis-George Ingle affair. Anyone times helped him parry the thrusts | Well acquainted with these two boys jhas @ pretty good idea of what | ot vitriolic diamond wags brot | “Your he remark re-|Squared circle to await the gong. | great was tl Doatty made to Joe. Replying to|Both are rugged customers, and this illuminating observation, Cor-|each carries a wallop that very © bett said much resembles the kick of a mule’s They tell me he was a great | left hind hoof. fighter; you see, I don't know. I only 8 him the ring twice; I eit a habit to look over ins listed in the column in Star guess he wWast fighting then Fitzsimmons won the first time and Jeff knocked him out the second time. But they tell me he was a great fighter.” ' | 13—Joe Corbett, 20 years ago | the most talked of baseball pitcher In the world, is a dep- uty In the county clerk's office of San Francisco. From eight | In the morning until five at night this former great star of the diamond pursues his rou- tine and more or less monot onous duties of checking up records, poring over office books and waiting upon the public which finds its way to the county clerk department. — | oe. 8 | Nineteen years ago ai dippy) crowd of baseball fans in Baltimore | roared themselves hoarse every | time a slender, quiet youth walked rom bench to box and back again |As the game progressed the cun-| |ning of the twirler grew more | marked. | Credited with having the great-| est curve ball of his time, Joe Cor bett was pitching one of those games which made him famous in the realms of baseball; as famour On January 7 of the year 1915, Doctor J. Eugene Jor dan was arraigned before the State Medical Board and his Meense to practice medicine revoked, the contention of the board being that the ad- vertisement reproduc which had been running in the local newspapers, was untrue, that Doctor Jordan |as was his brother Jim in the box-| |} Coal! not cure the diseases jing ranks | |] mentioned therein. The eyes of the country were Doctor Jordan appented to 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 eense. Judge French stated tn his |turned to Baltimore on this par ticular day. Boston and the home }team were fighting {t out In great contest which would cou much toward possession of the Na tional League championship. Op: posed to Corbett was Kid Nichols. | {On the pitching scrolls of Boston |baseball fame the Kid's name will live fo Every time Joe Corbett returned decision: to the bench a little crowd of men The court cannot find tn famous in the theatrical world this case that any credutous fought to hold his glove. De Wolt or ignorant persons have Hopper and Jim Corbett along | |} been deceived. On the other with a company of fellow players | hand, the witnesses who Jand friends, had horned their way | {J have been produced on be onto the ball grounds, They con | half of Doctor Jordan are among the best people tn the city Professional people people of- standing {n the community, people who are known to the Court person. ally and people who are known to the citizens of this city generally being among the best people tn the sumed some of their excitement by offering incense to the youthful phenom. Jim Corbett was mighty proud of his kid brother and | wasn't particular who knew ft Game Was Corker The game was a corker. It finally ended with a 1-to-0 victory for Corbett and Baltimore. Corbett and Nichols both allowed five hits. city, And I don't think that |The only run came {n the ninth {t can be contended that when Stenzel reached up about five they were oither credulous feet, with two, strikes and three or fgnorant except as the balls, and hit a wild one into the| | 'aity generally 1s somewhat right field bleachers for a home gnorant of medical matters run Corbett says this was th P most surprising game in which t There is as be of the testimony In thte far as that ts concerned | ever has been admin: tended to benefit the patient. ever figured. Joo Corbett made his great repu tation with the Baltimore Orloles in 1896-7. Here are the names of the regulars, aside from the pitch- ers, who made up this band of Temple Cup winners, the great baseball trophy of the day: case speedy out drop, delivered as fast as the straightest ball. With it he made monkeys out of the other Na |} toned Jeogue toama, He quit at no contention here that any medicine | t en given which {s at all harmful seems to show, as that any medicine that tered by Doctor Jordan bas There is no contention on the rart of the State, and it so stated by counsel for the State, that there was anything in this advertisement that was John McGraw, Hugh Jennings, {njuriecs to public morals, Heinle Reitz, Jack Doyle, Joe Kelly So that it gets Cown to whether or not this ad- | Brodie, Willle Keeler and Wilbert ertisement 1s #0 groasly untrue as to Involve Robin Robineon, who recently ral tur \e the part of Doctor Joréan ni of Cor u me 'g | Corbett's greatest asset was a )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 by Dr. Jordan’s Remedies Doomed to a Crippled Condition for Life by Other Physicians, Absolutely Cured by Glandular Remedies READ HIS TESTIMONIAL Seattle, Nov. 1, 1914, Twelve years ago I had tubercular abscesses on my nd under my arms, and the doctors here offered te for $500, but admitted that it might result ing my arm for | Decter J. Bugene Jordan and I have remained (Signed) — C. B. BOYD, 118 Fourth Ave. North, well ever since deen giving practical demonstrations of the merits ef right here In Seattle for the past thirty yea a hupdreds of siened testimonials on file tn my office, writt by RrAteful patients whom T have cured, will attest to its wonders ‘ures of Asthma, Anaemia. Biindnese, Chronte Inflammation ef the Bladder, D. om Paralysis of the Aw Diabetes, 1 Dropsy, Chronic ch e Infantile Paralysis Jaundice, Rheumatism, Men Goitre, Strabismus, called incurable beacon” There being & number ef Doctors Jordan im Beattle, tt ts ren to bear in mind fa and address of Dootor J. Jordan, 619% Firet Avente eenatue. Office hours, 9 a m. to p. m.; Bundays from 2p. m m. Consultation free. Corre. spondence solicited. atch “sack Saturday Star for remarkable cures —— ESE invelve moral Jordan and judgme Jordan GREATER VINDICATION COULD NOT BE DESIRED The Medical Board 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 -:ores of actual- ly cured patients as witnesses for his case. The stories of their remarkable cures have been stated rpitude on the part of Doctor In fact, all t will, therefore, be for Doctor under oath, has caused this statement to ba t th mbites and hie che cane Dr. Jordan is now nites on Second Floor of the Mutual Life Building, Jim sure was a|Will do when they climb into the |