The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 26, 1916, Page 7

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-If ve m- in oc iu er rn. ns or Pras s-Sat _ Darcy and gumshoe ‘itow Square Gardén fm which to hold | Seattle Ice Hockey Crew Will Battle Tonight for Place at Top of League Victory Wou'd Tie Mets With Vancouver Club BY EDWARD HILL ee foun. made it a tor the race for the Pa Hockey last season, consequence, will have « portunity to do battle t honors with Vane associat yuver head of the leag tand when the locals cross k gewith Frank Patrick's Mil lionaires at the Are Portland Plays Spokane Vancouve 2 four and lost] two games » has won three} and lost three games, Jand succeed in trimming Spokane Om the ice at the Inland Empire Metropolis, the Rose City crew will| come out of the with the Canaries for thir: ould Spokane win, howeve pattie! Should Port pae, the gang from east of the Mountains will stop over Seattle} Into second place. At present Spo kane is tied with tle for th . | second position, with three won and! Harry Holmes’ return to form, waa Says with the able the goalie in his old-tir Metropolitans should when the race ends assista The Probably will be as follows fancouver. Position. Seattle. | Lehman Goal Patrick Defense .......Rowe Defense ‘arpenter Rover . «Walker .-Center Morris Lett Wing Wilson Right Wing Foyston Is Hard Work to Line Up Go NEW YORK, Dec. 26.—Tex Rick ard, promoter, chaperon to Les expert, (hating more trouble in getting Ma. Doxing bouts than he did in becom- ‘ime maror of Npme, “Years ago. Alaska, some ‘Was a game the jealous promoters and would-be promoters of New York hadn't sprung on him in their attempts to keep him out of the boxing game, he would like to get some of these fellows have done.” Rickard expects to be able to an mMounce soon that opposition has been overcome, and that he has be. f a leas n the| United Press Staff Correspondent | next year's tea mto think for them-| The fair stars are improving Beatrice Rodgers of Cincin- Beers SE” tre exsonined the renee NEW YORK, Dec. 26—A | reives" rapidly and bowling scores | i Jawn McGraw wants the N. L. players’ limit fixed at 25. A Garden. He explained the reason ives.’ nati some time this winter. by saying he could put up a cash| frankness that is admirable is Need Some Ginger that men ms would not be| formerly played #| feeding 25aball players for a season, Jawn would have to hock his ball bond for the rental, while most of} expressed ina letter to the Without ntioning any names,|@shamed of. Three of the number in the North. #| park. the others would have to wait and| Princetonian, the college pub | 10, a5, in holdover mem: |bA4ve rolled scores of 200 or better | | make the money before they could| lication at Princeton universi: |) os tons team who could |&d the best team score so far for | : pay. ty, in which the late lamented J 1116 this hearttoheart talk to|® #0 932, an average of | 33 k Dillon Ma Be a football team, coached wd their own Learts and do wonders 186 2 e to roll bette IT B ] ac Melntyre Takes Two} #2087, Push, is given 8 te | tor Old Nassatt next fall, It tn a[fcares than that before the season | Tony Brottem Is E i cor that completely absolved Rush Jia nentable tact, but none the less | mds Visitor in Town With Rin f r Boxers to Portland) trom aii blame, The writer Pert that the young man who pen-|, Members of the team aro Miss Yr says ned the missive to the Prince-| Bark. Mrs. Grace Garwood, Mrs. Pex “ae E Rose Cit. Club} Last year our team was accus- | ana the ol quare. |®% Pearsall, Mrs. Goldie Greenwald,| Left to right, above, Mrs. Anna| Tony Brottem, former N. Wo For y ed of belong ‘yellow’ and a ‘bu oe poy lage er; Aaa oar aie | Mra. Anna’ Ruhf and Mrs, Ernest|Ruhf, Mrs. Goldie Greenwald, Mrs.|league catcher, now with the St oo an umor Chet Mcintyre, veteran box- | of quitters’; this year it is termed ||” 0” 1'8 o8 lost by poor think-|4- Brooks. Peggy Pearsall, Mrs. Grace Gar-|1ouis Cards, was a Seattle visitor ’ ti of Bid nan puasee.” lee organisation of ‘so brains.” The | Vet? same WAS lost A WAS 10 t —_—_———— wood. Below, Miss Hazel Bark|the other day. He is now out on a Bie ji wlll be seen in the ped [latter js undoubtedly the case; our/1né snd the Yale game WAS los (captain), Mrs. Ernest Brooks. hunting trip, according to reports, Jack Dillon, “the Hoosier He seldom knocked his man a © same reaso a ded ring himself ere long, left | team was a dumb team haat a seutk who plans to Tom Coulee and tearcat,” “the giant killer,” has pty Pres 1 Conertunitieg d fo! y coach sag * e mselves, today for Portland, where nie | Ae poy — oped ay heatna |U#e a great deal of intelligence tn Smith Box Draw ‘¢ ” Sher an Di S I quit the ring! e ferred to let his men otay ‘toe rotege, Lio adden, N. W. jor set of coaches to ins ra overcoming th life's obst mM n. rf Fightweignt champion, takes |into a crowd of seniors. If they |ealling for Ag ard pa : wire BINGHAMTON, N. Y., Dee. y g Dp are en ee hee ean for fituin Beane nate +, 1 " . y ec ws wa ant pass NGHA IN, . 6 where as outs. on “Muff” Bronson Thursday jhaven't got them they won't @e-\ 7 ii just yearning to be pushed 3 dianapolis, where Jack hi Ther quire them ‘in two months’ prac J Tom Cowler and Gunboat Smith, d t: t a cafe and started in business, an- here was never much doubt of Slices couth with bun to oe tice. 7 e team lost the Hervard Ate i ne ool aderm 0 Desi heavyweights, went 10 rounds to a econ ran (0) Cc O houncing he will never box again. | Dillon's superiority over such box- Danny Edwards, the Oakland |game thru lack of the proper) \, pike. Panartaat acofioce dra ° . Recent reversal due ane say |era a a bi _ (Bocckont) a |thought, and the Yale game a week | .* 4 T kl W t] F to failure of Dillon to keep i -}0 rge Chip, e boxed both eS later for the same reason he tne byline Bt no ven 1¢ e res ng ans dition, weighed heavily on the cues, nn usually won om While I want in no way to crit - ; * REAL PAINLESS great ecrapper, and caused him to put neither of them ey and November, He had a team vail toate: lictse coach! 8 career, after sev-| took the count from him. Wrestlers Wrangle _ icis« Che coaching, ‘4 ue Onn | whieh, to take a look at them lined NEW YORK, Dec. 26— Says He's Impressed Liddy toy Pang pacers | Bouts of that sort brought Dile Over Length of Go] eeiticta that ‘could have over. (UP. paper, would have tied Yale | Charles 8. ("Cy") Sherman, Sherman writes he was most im-|°"iton has been one of the most/lon into disrepute in many parts of fs hates oe, Se ee tenntans however, nani (snd Harvard into double-cinched veteran Western sports writer, “4 with Caddock’s perform: markable boxers the cvuntry has the country, and in many places he BAN FRANCISCO, Dec ihstric eet; the team lose Mn, Baan jbowencts. But, as every one and one of the keenest judges when that youth met and de-|'® a noad |never was a drawing card on aa Wrangting over the oe 2 . r p pi " Vee n han . om on knows, they didn’t do It, and the of a wrestler in the country, |feated Mort Henderson, the original | ra champion, Dillon has al-|ond appearance. wrestling bout began be-| los 0, pa d J D yo 0 wrote the le y 2 . : a . Sten ed ta cectacy tibiae andl aaliack of experience and partly and |20Uth who wrote the letter isn’t has devived into the wilds of |“masked marvel.” Henderson, in! ayy heen the “fighter who is going| Dillon was at the height of his . " SE a een ere caling {the only ona who believes that solid lowa and picked out a brand |his time, has met and held his own| Vey® Qo ten on career a year ago, when he beat Santel today, Cs eee 3 Lewis ioutoie G ‘iekes oF hecrin Pag ae ivory was the cause new wrestling marvel. Sherman | with some of the best in the wrest-|°"s.5.. many years Dillon fought al-|Frank Moran, Charley Weinert and Sec nest, Tu wh , taht P Lawis| were eiaety th -4 eee ake * ty Eaage declares the new phenom easily | ling Kamo, and for that reason Cad-|mogt weekly, touring every state|Tom Cowler in rapid succession, ee ae ee toot" usiiiesst decision ane. is as good as Frank Gotch, also |dock’s backers were somewhat re-| whore boxing was permitted, and|and was talked of as an opponent wants the bout to last 2% hours,{quick, intolligent decision when Jack Read Mitios a an lowan, when that wonderful [luctant to allow the youngster to|poxing for small stakes, for Jess Willard, alle a i Siete) 2 co be oo : rin agp Bos > Hard Tine Getting grappler first began to appear j|meet the time-tried veteran of the | = Tiv Kreling will probably refere 0 nportance cannot be ty pobile. lear simaet Gukie Boonie ane dle. = : 2 neers _ - In Sha Considering the fact that it was|pelled within a very short time| CINE 6000 JUDGE APPROVES OF THE DEPARTMENT'S GENERAL UXDERS.) n pe for Bout} tn order to sntroduce our ne : : ‘ : - an nal late, which {s the Sterman who first recognized the/after the bout started, when Cad-| oi S EATTLE HOCKE Y CLUB ape (whalebone) plate, which Is the ability of Joe Stecher und literally |dock sped behind the Eastern aastna en) | CAPONE. ® Jack Read, the Australian | lightest on ascnies serng om tee boosted him into prominence, his| wrestler and pinned his shoulders TIDY APPEARANCE wut ON OUTY | | TO WR CUT, THAT LITTLE lightweight who was seen in ttl toed ea tan Wik Caracal {RE indorsement of the farmer youth he | to the mat in just 10 minutes, The| MeTrEn eet OF Tat Toornacat) | SATISF INO CHEM, p s s action here against Harry An- | mou FAN dell or 18 years. calls Earl Caddock carries some|second fall was achieved in six =) derson recently, writes from i weight. minutes. | Championship Denver that he landed o, k., |G0ld crown ...+e0sse+++++++$3.00 — Cuddock, says Sherman, is a far-| The versatility and variety of but is having a hard time get. | 615 set of teeth (whalebone) $8.00 mer boy from Anita, Iowa, and has| holds with which the young farmer ting in shape in the high alti |§10 set of teeth -+-85.00 been in the ranks of the profession: | boy fought his adversary was aston tude of Colorado. He is to fight | Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 “8 only a year. His rise, it is|ishing, Sherman writes. “Not even a 15-round go on New Year's : stated, has been just as phenomenal |Gotch in his palmiest days ever day. Wie GrOwns +00 as that which shot Joe Stecher into| smothered an able oponent with nn Gold fillings . the limelight, and like Stecher, the | such ease as did Caddock in flatten Silver fillings Towa youth never has lost a fall in|ing Henderson's shoulders against Unequaled for Speed, Endurance, Skill Vancouver TONIGHT 8:30 P. M. SHARP Reserved Seats now on Sale at 1220 Fifth Ave. Arena Office, three lost. | Manager Multoon is celebrating} Rickard said today that if there | making exhibiti a slant at it. Influence of Tam- many Hall, penny politicians and every other influence had been thrown into the harness to pull} against him, Rickard said. “You'd be surprised.” he de clared, “if you knew the things STAR—TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1916. P. MUTT AND JEFF ~Merry” Christmas Was What Mutt Got Also JERR 1 WANT CHRISTMAS. MONON 1G with me ALWAYS GIVEN GIFT eveRN T CArvr GOT THIS SWELK : NECKTIE FoR MUTT For PRESENT, THLS Time ust INTIME . 1 MOTT COMING IN YOU © meRRY “ TNE FRONT Door SHRTMAS Gor vr MID ar. we Year A CHRISTMAS TUL SIDE IT IN } DRAWER Tice ro |e \T TO N/Me XT WONDER S_WNAT RE GOT FoR J me? \ TO &PEAK Te YOU KNOW Hou YOU A CHR . ter TN GONNA AGE Lae THIS YEAR, Ts Yea PLY ws \ eS No Women’ s s Bowling Title; They'll Make One _ ‘CLOSING YEAR HAS BEEN \* FLIVVER ONE FOR CHAMP | CONTEST IN ROPED ARENA NEW YORK, Dee, 26.—A year of fighters and their managers, ancther year of demands for enormous sums to box. and a year in which some of the fiabbiest cham- | pions ever produced have been | content to sit securely on their } many 10-round affairs, and has dem onstrated that no one can catch |him over the 10-round route when he chooses to run. Jess Willard, the heavyweight trail blazer, has been even worse, Following a circus in the summer | months, and protesting against pub: Heity at other times, the big hulk inaction by e bout, and/ laurels, is the pugilistic anal- (has engaged in only o: of 1916, that with Frank Moran over the| onship bouts of high call: 10-round route, There seems to be ber become so scarce that the no chance of getting him into a ma » formerly became all work | longer bout, altho several attempts ed up over the prospect of seeing have been made a champion and a nearchampion| Johnny Kilbane has defended his| get together grows very little ex-/ title just once in a bout of more} cited nowadays when word is} than 10 rounds, and he eastly dis-| passed out that a eholder is posed of George Chaney on that oc about to risk It. No-decision bouts! casion. There is some excuse for and the m senary tendencies of Kilbane, for there are no men of) fighters have one their duty. his weight competent to «ive him! old fight game is laboring a real tough fight. He has been ra tremendous handle angling for a match with Freddie In t year that is just slipping; Welsh. and if he « it e may! by t have been mighty few) help stir things up in the game. | bouts for championships. The! Tex Rickard, the man who made} ee possible the world’s championship | bout between James J. Jeffries and Jack Johnson at Reno, has been doing his best to kick a little life into the dying game. Negotiating for Madison Square Garden and some of the best bouts the world could produce, this master pro- moter has promised a revival of championship contests that will elusive Freddie Welsh, lightweight | title-hoider, has engaged in two mix ups over a marathon route. First jhe tackled Ad Wolgast, poor, old wobbly Ad, who still thinks he can » best; and then he snared/| White and the public for 20-round affair in Colorado | Springs Bouts Were Ridiculous There is no women's bow!- ing championship in the United States, so six Cleveland wom- eon have started out to make one. They are members of the Star Bakers’ bowling team, have already beaten the best woman's bowling teams in Obio and are now ready th bouts w ridiculous, judged | liven up New York to sult anyone. Bee yh standpoint of prchaven vm The yh ing year now promises |*,meet any team tn the country 1s, Neither of the|}much more than the ono nearly| TWO tours have already been ar- men could be classed as worthy of|over. If it doesn't pan out, the|"nsed, one which will take in the a champion’s skill, Aside from|game of hit and run will take an|Principal cities in Ohio, Indiana, th p bouts, V lawful shoot down the tncline. Michigan and Illinois and the oth sh has engaged {1 bigs ox Shag The team was organized by Miss Hazel Bark, the only woman man- ager of a bowling alley in the world. She acts as both captain and manager and has booked games for the two tours ‘PRINCETON WRITER FRANK IN PUTTING TIGER SQUAD |e." e's ON PAN AS NUMSKULL TEAM) 3:0" scisiee" sme erie have men's teams in Ohio, in- cluding the crack policemen’s team of Cleveland. } BY H. C. HAMILTON laid upon teaching the players of Platina fillings ..-- & match 1 work guaranteed for 18 yea fave Impress n taken in the morn- | ‘Charley White Is | and Excitement Victor i in Gotham \ing and met tecth same day. Exam~ NEW YORK, Dec 26.—Charley |Ination and advice free 'hY ed White, lightweight, outpointed Har. pice of Our Plate ry Pierce in 10 rounds ankle s Burns, bantam, defeated Pal Moore the Test of Time. | Most ef our preeint patronage fo 10 rounds, od. by our early custom- Phil Bloom outpotnt- ed Chick Simler in 10 rounds, Jim | fecOMMmeneen ty iy atill iving good Healy, heavyweight, stopped Tim | satisfaction. sak our customers who Sullivan in the first round o tested o1b work When coming to our effice, pe sure you are in the right place. Hring this ad with you, Jack White, brother of Charley White, Chicago lightweight, is in OHI Cut - Rate Seattle, and will, in all probability, : be used on the Elks’ card, to be Dentists Phone Main 2493 BF utaged on the afternoon of New 207 UNIVERSITY #7. CHINKSE RE! 121 Washington st, Year's day. Opposite Vraser-Patersen Os, YOU AQour I've eTMAS * aM | | | | ] in Order to Wed Leopold Christopher Hoern- schmeyer, outfielder with the New York Yankees, has pe- titloned a court in Cincinnati to change his name to Lee Magee. This is a preliminary to getting married. Magee says everybody knows him |# by that name, anyway, and that it would be embarrassing | to his wife to be known ai |#2 Mrs, Hoernschmeyer, while | her husband is known as Lee The Yankee outfield- be married to M |# Magee. er will smapeieplieibuiaaiinliitimmitin The Chinese rote | and herbs can auc ceenfully treat it Atsordere of met nd women Special for othache, head che, atomach rupture, ehill sore yellow awelling, kta been SING LEE MEDY CO. Vhone Main 2264, | the |the pad.” Sherman concludes a letter with the assertion that it is only a q |tion of time until Caddock, Stecter |and Strangler Lewis must meet an¢ |decide who is going to take Fran) Goteh's place as the world’s cham pion wrestler Stanley Yoakum Takes a Beating PHILADELPHIA, Dec, 26.—Stan- ley Yoakum took a beating from Terry Me , local lightweight {Eddie O'Keefe and Artie Root | Cleveland bantams, went six round: ‘Wo a draw. (Copyrient shew frede Mare fine 0 & Per B f BUD FISHER. Ofte Between Ourselves BY THE SPORTS EDITOR WITH OBVIOUS APOLOGIES The old sport stood on a gallery chair, sixday race, with a ddened air, is voice rang out with a grim despair, “It's not what it used to be! ‘Tis the opening night of the sucker race, I haven't seen a familiar face! Not an overcoat’s been grabbed in the place! It's not what it used to be! “In the golden days of this six-day grind, The gala years that I have in mind, We all had coats that were sealskin lined! It's not what it used to be! “There's @ copper now every second row, And an honest man don't know where to go! Them flatfoots have no sense, you know— It's not what it used to be! “I'll say it's quiet, and all of that, tut I'll bet you a two-buck Christmas hat These here promoters don’t get fat! It's not what it used to be! no doubt, was tough, And the work, at times, was a bit too rough, But the people came just to see that stuff! It's not what it used to be! % M Mt ts GIVE HIM THE MEDAL, EARL If tenacity was all that is needed to win six-day bicycle Worthington L. Mitten of Davenport, la., would have an edge on tically every field. Mitten, who entered the grind in New York, rode his bicycle from Davenport to New York, a distance of almost 1,400 miles, and refused to be discouraged by muddy roads, cold weather or blizzards. Mitten made the long ride partly to train for the sixday grind and partly to save railroad fare to New York. i The first two days Mitten rode in the rain and the country hotels where he stopped had no heat, so he was forced to continue his journey the next day with wet clothes. One day he rode 184 miles to keep warm. The old-time race, ot Fred Fulton will accept $10,000 to box Jess Willard. Aw right, Fred, but don't let Willard find it out—he'll want, that, too, MM MM Newspaper headlines aptly remark that Speaker leads the league In batting. In a month or so, they should get a scoop on the result of the Yale-Harvard game. % % 3 8 8 What has become of the old-fashioned All-American team, with ne Westerners on it? IVE a man a chance—whether he is on the force or a private citizen. It’s the Satisfaction, the good tobacco taste that wins him over to W-B CUT chewing. There are other things that help:—the gentlemanly appearance that the little chew permits; the easing up on so much grinding and spitting; last and not least, the economy—but it’s the tobacco satisfaction that turns the trick every time. Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, 50 Union Square, New York City

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