The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 19, 1917, Page 9

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OUGH LADS 4-ROUND GO hard-hitting and iq sive lightweight, ( net| f, has signed to meet} ucky Frankie Sullivan in the| Tivoli the aturday night for the I nse league This bout acting a great| deal of owing to the slam-b Sull put is in a class by herself, Aine | mat in a finish bout. Smith tn a 20-round fight. Indies " Jiong spear 69 feet 8 inches, a Each promoter has a contract tt are he will be substituted for e Moore |derful feat for a woms } calling for the ance of McCoy | McCoy in the Garden card : getting be She is an expert at running. She in a ten-round Al so far for It 1s pointed out that in case of @ be lately, and if he con-| can m the broad and high n Ml im m1 got himself as to sign for a ten-| Dillon victory over McCoy, should i ad : ’ |with a grace and ¢ th round go with Jack Dillon, Evident- be decided to stage a bout between te tinues to show the same class, | |make an ordinary hig tone ly he believed Weismantel had mis two before March 5, the Indi- the tough Chester will | blush with envy. She excels in laid the papers or would say nothing |anapolis slugger probably would be “es have a very easy time wide of athletics, the very if he went over to w rival lea selected as Darcy's opponent. ee Both bo thonght of which would make er NEW YORK, Feb. 19.—Spec- nation and an 14s always ‘ a set ia pink-faced dandies of the cities turn| Ulation as to the probable ef- |been a boon to baseball, due to the nd it looks as ere will be} All thin she has accomplish t| been prevalent in New York | fosters and encourages athletics in ~ a ‘ ro¥ re ‘either| doing her day’a work, And on top| since the United States broke every manner possible. Regi ~s Y ee : of it she ts stil a real girl diplomatic relations with Ger- | mental baseball teams always ara x allow t other to} Miss TY? 1un is a leading lady| many. Without exception ev- | n the opportunity q } fr the at the o' On company.| ery man highly connected with fae cei iy films is a strenuous! the national game has given | following the etvil BE THROWNOUT. RUMOR iG Ne : tiring all kinds of ath-| his word that he will be found | war naw birth of b 9 ae eee, r Several world cham doing his utmost for his coun ts mightiest form, Returr waancensemscceniabsio a Ma oe a Aw ea faule banks don Borsa ber ve Fultz, president of the an, 0 tt ae aly’ on ee H | Velen peeere: tenet: saree | Ree ee or Madden to won fame becau a 5 and, as aduall ogressed, it | : 0 lov 2s by ‘of : i Madden's prowess Baseball Players’ Fraternity, | became the entertaining sport of| “hich were made at the confer- Kadderly of OA tt be anal Gils hn cain Mins Thurman had neve has declared war would auto. | thousand | ence meet held at Pullman | indi suffer, Kaddéerly had Beal . She ay he c ni matically suspend the hostili- | The Spanish-American war saw] last June will in all probability jrunning in fine form at the meet, | ; is by beating Neff. | rat pic ties between members of his |the same conditions. Men, return-| be ¢hrown out at the next meet- | when he established the new record aa Casey on Program } “r to don| organization and the baseball jing from Cuba or from concentra ing of the board of manayers of 48% for the 440. Muirhead, who * The c t this smoker also tn magnates, but he makes it |tion cam were sport lovers.| of the conference. This action |established a new ifark in the high cludes Harry ey and “Frenchy ‘| plain that the Issue would |T it out baseball and other) ig forecasted in view of the fact | jump, with 6 feet 191 inches, will | , Valse. Casey hurt his hand at the} again be taken up at the ear- [forms of amusement with such t the Northwest record com- | be the third man to lose the covet- m. §. A. C. smoker Friday ni nat | liest possible moment. avidity that ¥ ated eras Of) mstee decided that the marke | ed record > not badly enough to cause him any | ade oa | ation of this sort has turn-| prosperity fc The coming were made in a 12-mile wind The meet in question was held He promises to keep | California untver.|¢@ minds of veterans back to daya|of tie Federal league was the which helped the contestants |on Rogers field, at Pullmam, 4am pretty busy. Harry man anid. “Th ish-American war, and/|thing to kill t wonderful push! thru the meet. 3rd of June. The University of Ore ~ ring a grouch for} © to call on som vived tales of seball ac-|this concentretion of men had) {¢ the hoard of managers rejects|egon athletes, led by McFee and | and if he coaches on the | lishments during the civil war} given the sport. the new marks, Luther McCroskey,| Muirhead, won the meet with @ rday night as he btedly | Period Possibly Lostilities, or prepara the crack W. 8. C. hurdler, will get total of 37 points to thelr credit,” re is goin to the] Boon to Baseball tion for datense by organization of | hack his old Utle as champion low Idaho, O. A. C., Washington State can get t It has been pointed out that ev-/ armies would have the same effect, | nurd'er of the confere Hoover | College and Whitman followed in * guard. Vaise has bee some of the greatest (ety sign of hostilities between this'hard as ft might be in other ways.| or Whitman in the meet Jowered|the order named, ing down to hard work rec thletes in the world live in and] a | j and is sure to give a good account around Los Angelos, At different | f of himself. For that reas, loca’ times they have appeared tn plc | ~ fans aro patiently waiting to S€¢| Migs Thurman Poised for the Javelin Throw and on Her Marks for the| {tres just as a nowing my him in action against Casey 100-Yard Dash. interest In sports y re alway © Houck has agreed to meet —————. | Willing to help me. I have had the EM toushest sailor Dan Salt can efit of instruction from such fa and as th men are still mous track stars as Fred Kelly, the} Orewhat disappointed with the showing made by their men at the| 5. A. C. smoker, it probable they will put up the best boy they can supply. Leo claims that he has a dandy sleep prod and it will be well for Uncle Sam's boys to be! sure to dig up some one who can| take a great deal of punishment, as Houck has been showing lately that} he likes nothing better than to whale away at his opponent and force a good, lively fight. | HUSKIES Nick Willlalms has little on Russ Hall of the Tacoma club when it comes to signing up baseball players. Hall is gath- ering together one of the largest squads the Tacoma club ever signed up for training work, and is following the pace set by the Spokane manager Five Entered in S. A. C. Marathon Five entries have been handed | : fn for the 8. A.C. annual eight-| Without a sign of weakening. | mile marathon race, which will be| Hall has added another pitcher ; held over the city streets on Thurs-|0 bis list of prospects. The lad is day. A. L. Goldsmith will act as|Herman Pillett of St. Paul, Or. He referee of the run. |stands over 6 feet 2 inches, and |weighs over 200 pounds. Joe Mc lad a tryout last sht him too inex erienced to hold _] REAL PAINLESS. | He worked in one game for Butte against Tacoma last spring, being ‘had battered M ty off the HALL SIGNING UP FOR HIS TACOMA B. B. CLUB) Bonner recommended Pille®to Russ Hall, and claims the big fellow has enough stuff in him to make good this «pring ‘mound Al 4 “Dutch” Methoff wants to get ont of the Northwest league. Melhott to go back this year John Ganzel, Kansas City man ager, will have a team made up almost entirely of discarded Cubs and F next year, zi 8.6 Fielder Jones ix of the opinion that the present scouting system of big league clubs is all wrong. He watch a player for two or ree days 1 then his ability of it |Are Many More at oon Home Like Freddy; Weeteren ROCHESTER, Minn., Feb. 19 j“Are there any more at home like fn order to Introduce our new) ?” asked of Free Pulte m, giant (whalebone) plate, which {s the |heavyweight and possible opponent lightest and strongest plate known, |of Jess Willard gs forth an af firmativ cover the roof of the answer. Fred is six feet does not mouth; you can bite corn off the | four inches tall, 1 weighs cob; guaranteed 15 years. | pounds, but he has nothing on all Gold crown -$8.00 | bis family, who live at Beatrice | Neb $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $5.00 | Here's the family table: Brother } Br or $10 set of teeth .. $5.00 sot. oe Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00 | or George, 6 ft White crowns . | Brother Roy 6 Gold fillings . | Brothe Silver fillings Platina fillings All work guaranteed for 15 years. lave impression taken in the morn-| 4 get teeth same day. Exam- fon and advice free. Samples of Our Plate Work, We Stand pounds; Mother, 6 ft., \Ice Hockey Season Most of our present patronage te mmended by our early custom- ‘whose work is still giving good fe tetection. ‘Ask our customers whe | ave Seattle has three more hocke games on its schedule and then thi be officially cloned. game scheduled with tested our work When coming to our office, be sure you are in the | | His Family Large, | pris The| ! Joe Stecher Not Overlooking Work SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 19 tho Joe Stecher insists that Ry is alread n shape for his wrestling match Thursday, with Ad Santel, he did not neglect bis training today He put in two hours of work at the Olympte club. Santel ts doing much of bis training out of doors, in run ning and tumbling about on the each sand | Wrestler Chin Beat in| Boxer, He Declares SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 9 In wrestling more effe: than box ing Al Williat restling tn tructor of the Olympic club, be lieves a boxer has little chance with Is t performer. ‘To prove it, he Mterod today to meet any boxer in world—Jeas Willard not barred in a rough-and-tumble test. Will jams guarantees that the be pinned to the n have no opportunity to fight. | Fight place. Bring this ad with you | oo okane at Spokane tomorrow, but| Cut - Rate |'t = lkety unis game wilt be played Polo Tourney to |here. Spokane is scheduled to play HI Dentists | here Friday night. Seattle finishes | End on Thursday | the season at Portland next week, | 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Vancouver deteated Seattle Satur-| NEW YORK, Feb, 19—~The big @rgectte Fraser-Patersos Ca | i) | polo tournament which has been go- BUILDING LOANS MONEY FURNISHED FOR BUILDING AT LOWEST INTEREST RATES PLANS. DRAWN FREE SMALE BROS. 601-2 Northern Bank Bidg. Elliott 686 Jing on at Riverside, ¢ since the 12th will wind tp Thursday big international championship |the British-American game. al with a in has wit ction of | American polo boxer will] at so fast he will| STAR—MONDAY, FEB. 19, 1917. PAGE 9 Chet Nett Matched to Box F rankie Sullivan at Tivoli Theatre Next xt Saturday GIRL, HAD TO LEARN. SPORTS TO. HOLD JOBDARCY MAY NOT WILL STEP IN SMASHES TWO RECORDS WHILE MAKING ‘GOO Dp BE ALLOWED TO | LOS ANGELES, Feb, 19.— t M FIGHT AL M’COY The following wa a comparison lee Mary Thurman, actre ‘Thurman's records and those made at Vassar | athlete, had to make good at man's time was clocked unoffictally but by United Preen Staff Correspondent for he subsequently jumped to Mad- | sports in order to hold her job Kee . NEW YORK, Feb. 19.—The ison Square Garden by signing ar- | in comedy motion pictures ; Vassar Records. Miss Thurman's Records burning question of whether Les ticles cs for a ten-round serap She did her duty with such |) SOyard dash 6'% seconds 61%, seconds Darcy will be allowed to show with the medistance jumper, | remarkable success that she { 75-yard dash 94%, seconds 9% seconds what he can do with Al McCoy = Darcy | has toppled over a couple of || 100-yard dash 124, seconde 12%, seconds In a ten-round bout will be de- Howl Goes Up Vassar records, having amashed |) High jump 4 feet 7'2 Inches 4 feet 5', inches cided this afternoon by the New Welsmantel bega to howl the | the women’s intercollegiate |) Broad Jump 14 feet 6'4 Inches 14 feet 2. inches York boxing commission, Grant minute he heard that MeCoy had | marks in the 75 and 100-yard |{ Javelin No record 69 feet 8 Inches Hugh Brown and John Weis- | jumped, and he has taken his ery to sprints. Hekiins 3 ieee CLS _$| mantel, the former the match. | the commission She is probably the first girl to | maker for Madison Square Gar- Jack Dillon is said to be now om take up the ancient Grecian apo ort den and the latter for the Broad- his way to New York from New Ore of javelin throwing, and in th way Sporting club, will gotothe leans, where he whipped Gunbomt . “ BASEBALL WOULD JUMP winner of high hurdles at pckholm Olym ‘ the} Les Darcy is the goods, says | Nate Lewis. We will |our money on Al MeCoy. Charley Weeghman i« going to \f Pinkman Leading }j send a valet to take care of the } |, Other Scrappers |) yezza em if -- com | my. Here’s how the lightweight {| boxers stand in the elimination fournament now going on. The | next bout in the ries will be staged Saturday night in the ) Tivoll, when Chet Neff meets Frankie Sullivan in the main event to the Everett Defense 1 league show. Cubs on th training trip Too Boxer— F. W. L. 0, |/bad Heine Zim has left the club Brooklyn won a chess tourna- Pinkm. 1 Mateen > 1 8 84) ment. Giad to hear Brookiyn ster : 35] can win something. \\ Wyard r} : GS i] A headline telis us that “light- 1) Gates + 0 0 1 | |weights battle tonight.” If they do, 1} Bronson 2 0 4 7), it Will be some lightweights we ndhdues ° || have never seen. i 2 q Sulliven 0 1 1b) Quiney club offers baseball play CECE EOS BEE IS ine ess at each, _Copni C202 Wal SSNS ‘li give O34 ifyotakem He’s Coming Champ,, Says Lichenstein | | G would do well his. Tom Uren Wins Over to get 85 cents fo: SYDNEY, N. S. W., Feb. 19.— Tom Uren outpointed Jimmy Clabby in a 20-round bout here Saturday for the middleweight championship of Australia. Both fighters took heavy pun. ishment, but Uren scored in a greater number of rounds. Barnes High Gun at Sunday Shoot « L. 8. Barnes, with 49 out of a | CHARLIE, | possible 60, was high gun in Sun- ° METRILL [day's shoot at Green Lake Harbor Island, Hugh Flemming | Larney Lichtenstein, manager of won high honors in the 100-target |Ad Wolgast, has a new prospect/event by nicking 98 of the flying | for lightweight championship hon-| clays. He was with three oth 4, er ors in Charlie Metrie, who, he shoot a miniateure Jack Dillon, who has not lost a decision in bouts. Metrie is said to be Syrian boxer in the world. SUNDAY SOCCER RESULTS Jers, with 49 in the 50-target ' eeeiliniane and Quays Finish Race in Tie The high school the only | basketbe all Bea- Dry Dock 6, Black Diamond 0. | son was brought to a close Satur- Woodland Fark 1, Celtics 0 day with Broadway and Queen : coor are Anne tied for first place, with six \F- STAR WANT ADS won and two lost, each. Lincoln, Ballard and Franklin finished in | BEST FOR RESULTS nklin lost all dule the order named, I eight games on its » | POSTPONE YOUR WEDDING Jntil after you read “The Story of Julir Page.” It begins in The Star today. See that the one you’ve promised to love reads it, too, Married or single, don’t fail to read this worth-while novel by Kathleen Norris. “The Story of Julia Page” is a story of human interest, taken chapter after chapter from life. Turn to page 4. now place ;| Harvard each have won the cham Clabby in Sydney) the words bI ‘Tven the words blend | By Peter B. Carney —/ One hundred and nineteen golf and country clubs in the United | States and Canada have installed trapshooting equipment, eee Vincent Oliver, the Philadelphia trapshot, is using the ¢ame gun that George Lyon did such credit able work with for many years. | ee Hereafter the annual meeting of the Interstate Association for the of Trapshooting ce place the first Thursday after the first Wednesday in No- | vember. | cee Yale won the Intercollegiate trap-| {shooting championship in 1916 for! the fourteenth time. Princeton and |pionship six times, Twenty-six thousand, {dred and twenty-six targets were trapped during the 1916 season at |the Bayside, L, 1, Yacht club, More jthan two dozen yacht clubs have jtaken up trapshooting, and a league Jot yachting clubs has been formed three hun- It’s a sign-post for aroma—every Omar. It says “This way, to aroma eee of richness, of ripeness, of whole- Sporting writers of Portiand, Ore., 2. ate sizohs tor the “sport alluring someness.’* To Omar aroma in other At all of the important events of he. Dentin Gea cluy, oneeics words! Kennedy, tt, Bertz, Goodwin and Cront representative Port land scribes, make up the sporting m ee squad, Aroma mages a cigarette—they’ve The latest addition to the trap- | shooting league ranks is the Mary }land Trapshooters’ league, compris. jed of the Parkton, Aberdeen, Ori ole of Baltimore, Baltimore Shoot told youhat for years) And Omar is aroma. It’s the perfect Turkish blend—the triumph of rich Turkish ing association and the Prospect . * | Shooting association and ripe accentuating leaves. Then Ke Omaromar spells aroma. words blend, One hundred and ten employes of the Pennsylvania Railroad company ently met at the traps to decide individual cha mship. W W. Willian of Philadelphia won the title. The Pitcairn, Pa. team took the team honors, | eee The Malba, L. |, |rine club | the Field and Ma-| has added trapshooting to| its list of sports, | ° \ Marysville, Pa. is the” home of | Even the the newest gun club. Tt fs called| the New Cumberland Trapshooting | assoc tation. | TO SIGN PAPERS | : | CHICAGO, Feb. 19.—Tom Jones 3 ind Frank Force, respectively for ‘ | Jess Willard and Fred Fulton, will : |get together here some time er jand sign articles for their much talked-of fight, it is said CIGARETTE S It is understood articles have saat “‘Smoke Omar for Aroma” drawn up and copies in possession | }of the managers for ten days or| | more, all wrinkles having been iron-| jed out and the formality of signing being tho only thing left to cinch the match. Details have not beer announced but it is stated Willard is to get a eyarantee of the first $50,000 that| comes into the house, as well as an option of 51 per cent of the movie] rights, or $20,000 in cash for them. | Grant Hugh Brown, Madison} Square Garden promoter, probably | will get the fight, tho several bid- ders are understood to have submit- ted offers PHIL. ADE LPHIA, ‘eb. 19.— “Chief” Bender, former star pite' jof the Athletics, will be arraigned | Jin police court today, following the | death of a 31-year-old man who was | run down by Bender's automobile. It was learned early today that the | “chief” called at the office of Super intendent of Police Robinson, fol lowing the accident, and surrender- ed himself,

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