Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a STAR—THURSDAY, JAN, 25, 1917. PAGE 9 red Mitchell, New Cub Boss, Has His Own Ideas About Training Pitchers MUTT AND JEFF—Lilac Must Eat Her Food Thru a Straw (Conyrtent tert py tic risher BY BUD FISHER. Must Use Brains | 2 “Gir HAS TEE = au 7: ay oy Se MUTT I CAN'T SLEEP - ~ THE GRACE OF A Lame, THAT'S a th as Well as Ams TM SO IN LOG wit OR EAT FOR. “THINKING OP + PANTHER , CARS LIKE A Hor ONE. \. . LILAC" 2 simpey must] | “LILACT. SHE'S so seauTieut! PEARL SHELLS and Nou Peop simp} P S tm)! Chicago Team TALK To Some BODY |] WITH HER Face Like @ EYES UKE A FAWN pe rater Nall NEHER : | ABOUT Hee GRECIAN GODDESS AND ied AND TEETH LIKG KAS ere | HAIR GOLDEN LIKG THE A LAME - LILAC BY PAUL PURMAN HARVE Sy suNteT AND — When Fred Mitchell, new) Cub manager, begins building up a ball team out of Charley Weeghman’s disorganized batch of players this sprin his first eff be directed to teaching pitch ers to pitch intellignt ball There are three essen pitchers must learn, Mit declares. They are contre hold runners on bases, and t Pitch without putting every thing on the ball Mitchell says the wise pitch- er knows when the batter Is ping to hit, and that Dick Ru- Puolph can cali the turn on the y hitter every time by the way he tightens up on the bat. Most ball players will this statement. Rudolph h bean credited with saying he could tell that a batter was going to swing or pass up the ball, and the smartest pitchers have never made such claims The fact !s that the batter ts up there, set to hit anything he likes. and just because he may have de cided to pass one up ts no reason why he would not swing {f the ball ts grooved for him. Rudolph, like others, stu batters, and knows what they hit and what fools them. Not hav- fe great strength or ex speed, Rudolph MUST know } batters to be successful. In this Rudolph is only follow s, he says, wi = OF PP Pa Pee to | 674s. @o CHIP FIRST TO MEET DARCY BY H. C. HAMILTON United Pre 3 NEW e time today, Tim O'Sullivan, ma ager of Les Darcy, expects to apply fs signature to a set of articles EX-HEAVY CHAMP TO _ REFEREE | To! Burns, former heavy weight champion of the world, will referee the two main bouts tomore row night at the Moose boxing show in Dreamland. No judges will GREATEST AUSTRALIAN BOXER OF ALL TIME NOW APPEARING AS ACTOR IN LOCAL THEATRE BY EDWARD HILL call 0 cy’ De af Ite th ine made nowadays ,and there by defeating four men. | Orleans, J Jthe continent to do battle with ing a@ practice started probably by alling for Darcy's first ring ap- Despite the no! ‘ ‘ r n riean be use ssistt Addie Joss, who made himself the pearance In this country the night about Les Darcy, the t » he weighed 165 pounds! Oli ttle |" R Re : Pon ae — sting Tommy de Jeading pitcher in t American of March 5, Darcy's first tralian that ever drew on a pa¢ hi ¢ erica by | will e “Nonpareil” was a big favor. ; n { epee league for years by study nent ts expected to be George Chip, | mitt or stepped into 4 JM Dempne the | mor | n the Northwest. He was bac Whe dice a Lowe oe aiend knowing what altho the articles also call for famed Nonpareil,” whom he|sey was making his he in Port-|ed heavily in these parts, and it is} 01° @evanee Bale of tel a Ghheut ont iat te Gacees wits Billy Mites or Ai Mo knocked out in 13 rounds at New |land, and n the long trip across | said that his defeat at the hands of | Pi oy oe 3 goign: i ona , ic owe tn i Fitzsimmons broke his he nd pares co crowds the limit. Coy. Darcy, however, has tndi apo p apesdig ever turn out for a boxing card will Jeny rat | broke Jlater hin he remai * buried in a cemetery jnear Portland But getting back to the Fitzsim- |mons of today, Bob believes that his son has the makings of as| he retu 4 to Portland n spirit. A short time ith gave way and his Pitchers with great strength jbe on hand n the doors are |thrown open tomorrow night, Re 7 jports from various training quar a fect that the mitt d for the settom * | ASEBALL fans wil! recall Oba-[od his desire to meet Chip again. and terrific speed are not forced 'B: ah Hunter, the reeruit}and Newcastle George probably to resort to this method, altho | ner who took A stack of| will be the lucky, or otherwise, guy. | the strongest of them find | hots ‘with the Seattle club last} Grant Hugh Brow selves more effective by a | *pring. jtenant of Madison Ga matic study of opponents. | ‘Obadiah was all that his first /#lready bas approached O'Sullivan Pitchers of the type of Walter|name would indicate |with an offer of $30,000 for a ten fohnson and Al fer can win| He looked so bad the first day | round set-to, and O'Sullivan nicked raided as a More secrets! Eddie Pinkman, local lightweight 7 a wad er.|that when Walter Cadm regular |it off in a big hurry. At first he great a fighter as he was in the| © i , Bs Ing curves. tays longer for a raise in pay | stre ak bakween. nae and March 6,| weight championship of the world ter of the padded mitts. 1 On, goonies an ‘ithe Matthewson won success by After the first day out, Hunter|but he finally agreed it was not| With all due respect for Darcy The old champion looks with dis. | nean't touched ment or pes Ry studying batters. He was one of got real confidential. That night he|#uch @ long time after all. jprowess as @ gladial we are of favor on the short, no-decision | hasn't touched me He ei it the greatest exponents of this style| told «at Eastley, | mate Darcy will n work immed! | the opinion t Fitzsimmons has bouts of the present day. Guaran-||*° elf is of pitching | “I looked pretty ay, |ately. gone his fellow t declares, are ruining one |? . 1 that it is helping me come | be ras of the grandest sports of all time. At that, however, unlike John L,|*iderable,” he stated this m Sullivan, Bob readily admits that |"Pon his return from a light ram there are boxers of today every bit |" the road. I have become stromgy a8 good as those of the past, altho 4 lost weight at the same ed n't see a great deal in th t fire me t | Cy Young hung on in the big| Mr. Dugdale -" . | show for years because he knew)! Was the first one to send | rue, Fitzsimmons, like Peter} application. I got the job last No rte sche, ix nota native Aun | What to feed batters. omni alia, He was born in EB land, have a system in making bate | "ext day when Manager Raymond D ENTISTS ance at i Mace’s tournament tn | men hit certain ways, He con. | told him the club would no longer “ th a i tn 1880. Ho started | tended certain kinds of pitching ponsidle for his hotel bill a the road to pugilistic fame then resulted in mathematical an- | gles when the bat struck the (0 ystnae are agreed that| ts for Jess Willard’s crown | a : now hold the spotlight | Frankie Burns, the Oaklander, 2 [stepped on the scales at Austin & Salt’s gym yesterday afternoon, | and, according to Lonnie Austin, |tipped the beam at 1 pounds, Frankie declares he stands ready n 25 pounds for any light. | weight the Northwest, or will @ {|make 18% pounds for a title bout with Muff Bronson. We're Looking for the Dave Hillyard Is Most Popular Sport in | After More Kale ball, and that he could deter. | George Capron, the former} mine before the bal! was pitch- football star who played out ed whether it would be hit In |+ield for Seattle back about 1910, | the air on on the ground. |was about the funniest player in But, altho Rhodes’ theory seemed/the league at that time | Plausible enough on paper, ft didn’t George had plesty of the world's| ‘Work out In reality, because Rhodes| goods and wasn't a bit worrled | : eould not determine whether the| whether he played ball or not fm erder to introduce our new |February 6. T Dat would meet them cleanly or aj One day in Vancouver George | (whalebone) plate, which Is the, bout scheduled little above or below the turn, which| was on the bench with an injury. lightest and strongest plate known, | celed completely shattered his calcula-| Seattle and Vancouver were put does not cover the roof of the ob Moha Signs to | Box Tommy Gibbons | MILWAUKEE, Wis Jan Rob Me | Tommy G Milwau ight-heavy. ed last night to meet | bons, St. Paul, » MohaJe | . tions. ltings on a stirring 15-taning battle | mouth; you can bite corn off the|\ Co-ed Hangs a Seattle; Help Us Hunt}! yore sie [7 \_ If Fred Mitchell can teach pitch-|that ended 21 In favor of the|eob; guaranteed 15 years. New H 1 Up d si BUTS Jan. Se ee ers to tell when a batter !s going to Canucks | Gold erown ......-2.0-+5 £3.00 ew Furdle Recor ¥ ak aiererd ov ee Sa bs 2 d when he isn’t, he will have, After the game, Mike Lynch, | 9y¢ (whaled: ys lho itperd a r PPREE the opposing ‘clubs of half then skipper of the Seattle club | $15 eet of teoth (whalebone) $400) CHICAGO, Jan, 26.—Miss Mabel OR the first time since he en-|'oldout. | Hillyard was . siveniig ‘ ie oniriie 06" 80 ody hc $10 set of teeth .........- $5.00 MeCon ed at North trial with Vernon in the Coast offensive strength—It's worth was feeling pretty 1% Capron tered the contest, C. 8. Paul- tehing. sen te ake Edad lone Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 western ur today esta! son has dropped out of the|cague last fall, but was Salaam os | y, Mike, that must have been | White crowns ... eda world's record for the 50-ya |) lead. | beck to Bute | r " today, xclaimed woman's hurd Ls g over 5 ‘i bese. Western Athletes = some same today.” exclaimed | Geig tinines «.. obstacles in 81-8 seconds. A few| | Cea lgerrsab biden br ytingt al ki F Make ’Em Notice | “soine game, well 1 should say tt | St'ver filings apo gle Rye cg Ape eult Rubs honda the let. He te tet] North Yakima Race : was, Where the re you | Platina fillings a too! res 6 5 seconds in the lowed by Ralph Junker, and then Program Given Ww YORK, Jan ~Two|that you don’t know it was some All work ps tet te | Robert Fitzsimmons | comes Paulson, in third place. Char. i agg Western athletes, Robert Simpson | ¢gme?” | ean _— . lie Hulen has topped Joe Walsh. NORTH YAKIMA, Jan, 25,—The and Joie Ray have two more rec-| “I fell asleep in the third inning,” ords to their credit to Ray | replied Capron emashed a world record in the Mil |racing program for the state fair, |to be staged here the third. week ;|in September, will consist of purses | “Battling” Bunker broke In’ BULLBROS) MARKET REPORT © 2? Tose Athletic association mileand - Ps . | the Test of Time. h Junker .. amounting to $6,000 for the 10 half run last night and Simpson Richie Mitchell Most of our present patronage ts | 1013 THIRD \C. B, Paulson events. No money will be offered ome time off two Ameri commended by our early custom- Nitutose ane ei 4 buying be eror rai ‘ ss Migs er Ae loeg lar aes, Sar ae Calls Off Melee | [7c eic Sern is ct giving good en” | Pota are firm and buying has ony Be £52 | Charito Hulen 1 lanes octane: BE h te 4 half in 6:45 eed satisfaction. Ask our customers who almos topped a Mees iy jJoe Walsh q 5 a BiAs of & nectad better then the | MIL’ “gam 25-—Richle | Ree aitcate tars yousreinins A MUSEMENT S| | Been New. case Reewads| ote yeu Nostars sree 1,860 ‘Charlie Hulen to y are yan, | Mitch t with John Kil- | right place. Bring this ad with you. iaenaaninnedeshiidig RENAL ALES, | tutter took a step of 1 cent to- Strained + 05%@.09/Gene Hatton te eeeeeeeee old mark. | Simpson topped the 70-|hane, scheduled to go ten rounds sige | ward the sky Wednesday. “This 1 | oranges Tealey Raymond "so Play Everett Man J ure ~o 6 a sbruary a the first movement, either up or | Peare—a V. W. Barton 645 ee & fifth of a second better than Jack eee Sat rea uekle’ tn OHI meee ALHAMBRA |b i Govols tn some toe sone W@'ti| Nrowster White Gis] Charlie Hulen, “Seattle billiard as Or Mitchell's right hand. The Mil-| Dentists | pl Apples—— : eee re tie: Pinkman pei Paces Regeneer tee waukee fighter will be out of the 207 UNIVERSITY 8ST. There {# little movement in green | Jonathan ‘ se0-1.09@178/ Chauncey Wright . : ere hi eta Wi ren, eritke Ion Takes _ game six weeks at loast | espentte Fraser-Patersea Ca, ables. The market is fairly | grey sun win 1s yt se [Frank Vance ho Everett representative in the Job Back I ICAL | well supplied. Local cooking .. 0%) Roy A Pinkham. Steamboat Billiard league. The eferee Jo AC! r | cdi ciaaicea cee Bp! - 179200) Alex Rose play shifts to Seattle next week. Delletou 1bo@17 oil The egg market js weak. . A , oo _ ~~ Rome 1.00@1.25|Art Lomax Mickey Ion, Pacific Coast Hockey FIVE VOTES FOR sane a Sho association referee who recently | | ; ns are 9} rg tabs Charle Jordon resigned, following charges by the | | jceale Dealers for Pealtry, Veal ; < ins With Cue soe eeeesceces owes ccecoecossoes attling” Bunker e Leonard .. ergt. Putnam Portland club that he was unfair, and Fruit Will be back in harness soon. Ion, Spring Chickens Charley Jordon came back last Docks —Fat Seattle's Most Popular Sports however, will not officiate in any | man | r | AILY 10-25- VEBETABLES : night at the Pope-Sibley parlors > MATINEE D 50: PR ea 1 Dobie iy ope-Sibley TN ner sae ae aa u EVENINGS |0- 25-50-75: [i hoes : id E. Griffin and defeated Walter Johnson fi > Walker y| t match for the Northwest bik . 4 itei 1 erby liard title. The score now stands, 7 : j <.+ 01, W. Donovan . 9| Jordon, 100; Johnson, 93. Tonight } Bu From the Producer and Carrete—Per sack eS | H. L. Brown . | 95] Will see the finish of the last block, bag Ca Retaller for Y | Dr, W. C. Gibson by. "4 F. White .. 15|C “‘Dinty” 10|Ed Hamlin 10] Louie Lang . id Brunn .. ach Coleg .. Colery—-Per crate . Corn Huske-—Per 1b. Cucumbers — N || Capt. Lounsbury ° Doe Lindstrom . 29] Dr. M. A. Matthews . - 40] A.C. Shelton .. 30] Z. A. Van Duyn $8| Josiah Collins "7 Sto the Hi h Cost of Livin It dows this gently ‘Third and Madison, Tel. Main 6106, r} a rea ’ 6 TODAY—the and 260 Wenr Mlectra- usteal Players tn is the plan of the housewives. Likewise stop the while youll] ron Conant Musical Play high cost of dying. Buy your caskets direct from MILNE ene This Week, the manufacturer. Cut out the middleman. ' Why pay $ 50 for a casket we sell for $25? Why pay $ 60 for a casket we sell for $30? Why pay $ 70 for a casket we sell for $35? Why pay $ 80 for a casket we sell for $40? © Washington creamery cutes Vita ALACE HIP 30-6; Eves, 6:30-11 P. Afternoons, 1 New G@ Show ‘ou sleep, eray and bul the entire system te a strong, y condition, ows the apirit of ambition and CLANCY & ©0. Why pay $ 90 for a casket we sell for $45? uetion Tt maken strong. Nealthy | | Today Spanien fT} ‘ Why pay $100 for a casket we sell for $50? Reciinm ven ase ke i mat Fy fra St | innate Why pay $ 35 for cremation we do for $20? D | Parsiey Aifaita Meat And on the better grades of goods we fave you an even | Cal, per dow bunches . 301% ‘alfa an Per sack or Paranipe Peppers greater percentage. Why deprive yourself of the necessities of life in order to pay an outrageous funeral bill, and get no "1 better service and no better goods than we furnish for one Call or write for our Pope half the money? aE henutiful 90-page book. We give a complete funeral, including casket, attendance, reatmonie | Rhubarb calling for body, cremation, and urn for ashes, for raptesobgar MMMM MBE 7 jo.) ili, @ried orn— Nebraska, 1 40.009 41.00 @52.00 . Der Ib... Rutabsgas—VYakima, sack , Squash Per Ib Hubbard steseweeneee 090.08 We matntain our own casket factory, cromatory and a Pisiobeae heed complete parlor and equipment for funeral purposes. CHL, ADAsKet OFRLO . reve ee 2 00G2.75 Prossed . Don’t allow anyone to dictate to you what Undertaker Turnips- Wheat doon 9.00 at May. 17.00@ 18.00 Cal, per sack 1.26@1.75 yon shall employ when death comes to your home, but all 1.00@1.76 the one who will give you the best services and best goods for the money. BLEITZ-RAFFERTY UNDERTAKING & CREMATION CO. Phone North 525 617-18-21 Kilbourne 6. ——— 10c OAK 20c ri .,,|mateur les Games | gente a pees eee cuw’| Set for Friday Eve Monte Carter and ‘Company Cal, sweet .. sees OTR E.04 Two amateur ice hockey melees All ‘hia Week } FRUIT are billed for tomorrow night in the # CKING GIRLS" |), are pe searoaey eae BRING RESULTS | (00712 ane ov THe anny re | Jomporon’ maneanamncsunmmannapeas ob8ie | LACS will. cross sticks with the Elks, is