The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 2, 1917, Page 9

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_ he £ F ed bsizeriz # 2 4 esi AG FEE to ree asia fi* _Febsz ag E oo ere Prob BFaf i bivtt ribet? #7 a Eon | ae a Ce La LRARE AE: woh Ls 4 SRF Eee ae S68. PRAECES & ™ me all- GES i STAR—WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1917. PAGE 9 SHOWING MADE last | mt at tho Arena by_ the Gitons dors—Mike and Tom, te Paul—was a revelation tn ‘ ancient and able art ¢ Merete heard much of tt ppiaiag speed of those two famous but most fans had never them in the ring, and were to take others’ word for It gedoudt the truth of the reports i that has been said of their ork in the is surely tr certainly made good all re that we have heard about per their speed and skill in the roped arene. T truly have ¥ fine potnt wang down to @ fine P “| HAVE BOX with a good| heavyweights ta every sec ‘of the cou Grpdons last qxhidition wi ae 3 F E atid, and faster i i in the fe oe CERTA! good joke down Ban Francisco. Tr ig th do now? a hard one dnghty_crvbaby, W pe the Pacific coast, and Ad native sons after Jom Stecher. aimed our ‘Dems, the former @ampion. Thomas ts now near Los Ange! fant back to the big city ‘Wa to reenter the ring in Montana for a bo Meehan when Chet M ‘weared the Frisco fai Teamy called off the go Back to His Wi Jetk Dempsey, the Deavyweight, will neve his wife without her where he is ts to the Jim Finn, “Is that fame old story of a only my wite and the Mrs. ha’ red Tom fo lowing | — gained con-| LY MUST fmagine what they are No, you Deavyweight chamy yon ot the wrestler who was given get of the boot by those Bridently Santell sees that the thing he can now do tee fs to take a train out. he goes, however, he seems wp hanker for another bag of silver, ¢'wants it bad enough to ret into altho he AIR of California old friend, Tommy heavyweight Preparing to b*come the of w health re.ort. owns some 35 acres of which he tn- turaing into a place where fired and fat business man may for a few weeks and then form end feeling fit as a a evidently given up his He was boy, Dempsey Goes © Denies Fake Charge Salt frst tell- going and) ‘be expects to return ory that I faked says Dempsey, ‘Mio ts back ta San Francisco from my ‘ought I wasn’t coming back and | Wanted to get even on ma Merely thought she was.” mate 8 a boxing | ap in that Santell, the he had in San in San with a ut with eIntyre and MUTT Mogrid; AND JEFF I HATE TO Ge UP AND 6O BACK To CAMP WITHOUT ANN TROVT, FR'LE KID THE LiFe OUT OP me, TINE FISHED ALL DAY AND LL INE CAUGHT ISA COLD Mutt Must Be Pulling Some George Washington Stuff Yea} THose Are Fine! TLL TAKE Two DOZEN BUT WAIT A MINUTE, DON'T WRAP ‘ern ve SOME PITCHER Carve another niche In the tiasebal! hall of fame. It Is to be occupied by George Mogridge, Yankee southpaw, who broke In on April 24 with a no-hit game at the very start of the second season in major league baseball. 's feat is of particular interest in that it followed a 5 similar hitless game by Eddie Cicotte by only a few days. fe; Lake T again All wife It woman | wasn't MUSEMENTS PPO POLITAN THEATRE TODAY, TONG AND ALL WEEK AMBRA 5 'eP INI NE ‘MEUM VAU DEVILLE 2:80—Twiee Dally « Prima Dy Aldo Handegger, pianist “Rath #t. Dents Next Week £E.DA INGS W marti 1c to Lous soncno AN prc SHOW led fore, AND ‘Shee EVt her Jevce, 10-25-50-75 ICKES PLAYERS Thurs. and Sat Flayers Present Brana DANCH) Satie tee soe ana 20¢| Northwest Secoartins Gather for Meeting an4 Bun, ie 9:20 na -50 (Last Draw ball 5106 lish, Mats., Charley Jord D to Northwest gather | headquarters, jing, to elect other dmportant business for the year. queated’'to have a delegnte present. to the jaw. coming | LESSON | ‘Wand resumed their honeymoon. |..~ lace cameras of three-cushion billiards, arrang- | ed especially for The Star.) | BY CHARLES HULEN first object ball, using reverse eng- Jordon Wins Over Walgren With Cue} ” Walgren, ee took a trimming last night in his three-cushion H18| Hulen parlors. tonight GEORGE, “Moe SRIDGR won @ victory, Eddie allowed three bingles. ington, ington won, 3 Acosta's twirls swat five lessons in | out of two. Los An league cellar. to the cushion off Tris Speaker, suspended. Everett billiard battle with lon, at the Brown & The score was 25 for fourth the total. Bill Floor; S soccer officials will at the league's in the Stuart build officers and transact place now, will stitute play for Cleveland. Inning. contributed a homer ninth and added two more to Yesterday's Northwestern league hero was Eddie Kletn. for Seattle and the Giants finally He pitched after’ dropping the fret four games of the Reuben Gardner soused ot for who Is watch Two pitchers were slain as the Cubs pounded the Card, mi ven rune Larry Doyle the season. Canucks bat Joe McGinnity’s Butte team still continues to mu ball games. The Montana crew chalked up six errors against Itself in yesterday up its combat, Jack Goldie played left fleld yes |\Cnicege terday for our lads agate for @ double and single én four trips to the pan He nicked the Yeetrday’s big league hero— Bill Donovan. He protested the decision of one of Ban John- umpires. occupied third base at Wash- and Donovan claimed they were both out. Umpire Dineen held otherwise. Wash- to 2. Two men ot a threesack a! out doubles, Gardner got three es is atill in the Const | |eob; guaranteed 15 years. Jack Marshall is hitting the ball hard for Spokane. in fifth some sub: He ts In the In the Tate Rests on am Hit Him ST. LOUIS, “May | 2-—RBill Tate's six feet, seven-inch frame lay on | the floor five minutes after Sam Bach team is re-| Langford pushed over a right book KILBANE SHOWS UP FRED WELSH BY H. C. HAMILTON him from annihilation, which pois Vetted Prose Staff Correspondent 1 ready for 1 atall times [le |hid his chin carefully bebind his NEW YORK, May 2.—There |gloves and stood waiting for Kil le one sure way to separate fiane, Kilbane tried to make Freddie Welsh from hie light) |wWolsh lead by feinting, but the weight title: Match him with Johnny Kilbane, the feather. (not be led to the slaughter. Kil-| weight king, and stage the bané landed almost at will, but he bout where a decision can be also was woefully wild with his) | given. punches, They carried « real | Kilbane today had shown New| sting when they landed | York fight fans that he te the real| It was a Kilbane fight from the |master of the crafty Welsh, and /start. After the first cautious mo- |were it not for the laws of the nts had worn away the feather. state of New York, would be/| weight champion tore in. He out jcrowned monarch of the light-|boxed the clever Welsh, When | wetght division, Welsh fell back on his best efforts | Other boxers have outpointed & one-step ind the ring—Kil- Welsh. Several second-qass bane outdanced him. He laughed youths have taken an the cham at Welsh and the crowd laughed him Welsh left the ring with a dam- pion and outfought him, but it in| with doubtful if Welsh ever stood tn a ring with so many boxing gloves aged eye and wit flying around as last night. The bleeding. Kilbane master of block and stab was ecratch given a boxing lesson by a black- In th headed youth, who laughed at him. | title seemed to be in Kilbane'’s He was shown up by @ man who/grasp. He shot over a quick right |wetghed nine pounds less than/to the jaw and Welsh was dis himself. tressed when the bell rang. The Weleh Saves Seif |crowd wildly shouted for a knock cunning of Welsh saved | cut. d not bear a fourth round the double Th “PHANTOMS” IS | RIGHT, SAY WE | | | | | If some one had had the fore | “Muff Bronson, Port! | thought to have provided Dick | We’! ts had ahost & 60-60 verdict arry nderson, who made Welle and Chet Mcintyre with his first appearance ince being | a handful of bird shot before operated upon for appendicitis they climbed Into the ring last | might at the Arena, they prob- ably would have hit the Gib- erson stepped around al clever style, but in the Por bons boye—Mike and Tom—a greasive. couple of more times, at least. If anything, Frankio Sullivan As it was, however, the St. Paul! had the advantage by a shade in |champs “phantomed” the middle | his fracas with Henry Gleason, for }wetght from Cincinnatl and the wer national amateur htwetght | | Pacific Coast heavyweight cha champion, ed much | pion all over the ring. The crowd pep in the first two rounds, but| enjoyed watching the burly Chet began to weaken in the third chap-| }and the husky Dick try to land on ter, and from then on the Los|/ the St. Paul boys Angeles youth began piling up a The Mi sotans ware so fast lead that entitled him to an edge. that we'll bet Mcintyre and Wells In the curtain raiser, Bernie thought th s & Gibbons on Dillon and Meade Manning, fly every side of them. weights, boxed to a draw. All the | The preliminary events were bouts wero of four rounds dura | above the average. tion AMERICAN LEAGUR | Won, Laat. aan ‘ a ‘ 300} ‘ 1 Loule 0-4-2, Chicago 9-90 . North and Snyder; Doug Detroit eapitsses i ~ RESULTS TUESDAY At Washington 2-10-2, New York 2-4-1 Harper and Henry; Shawkey and Nuna- |Stacy Shown’s Nine | Pie vaca ae, Hikes to Auburn to | g NATIONAL League Battle There Sund y New York ‘ ‘ eer Chicago 7 : Leet Sunday, at Woodland Boeton ‘ park, a large orowd gathered, deapite the rain, to witness the contest between the Stacy Showne and the Times Ducks, and after watching the down- pour for fully an hour, were forced to leave in a dieappoint- ed frame of mind as the grounds were too wet for the game, Next Sunday the Showns will hike out to Auburn, where they will attempt to take a fall out of Jimmy Agnew and his Auburn equad, “Ducky” Holmes Is Named as Umpire REAL PAINLESS DEN TISTS fm order to introduce our new | (whalebone) plate, which fs the lightest and strongest plate known, foes not cover the roof of the CHICAGO, May 2,-—Ilh D. Hart mouth; you can bite cern off the ford of Han Francisco, scout for the Los Angeles team, was today 00 named as one of the ‘umpires for the Three I. league, “Ducky Holmes, former Western league manager, is another indicator hold er named. | Geld crown .. | $16 eet of tenth (whalebone) $8.00 $10 set of teeth .. Bridge work, per toeth, gold 3.00 | White crowns ...0-+ | Gold fillings . | Silver fillings Platina fillings All work guerentes@ Ry rensise, taken th same ,. vies free. 8 & 5 = tw > nD o 7 a =| n o mn LD 3 =] — Py +600 | -780| | 15 years, | Under Way With Win WATERVILLE, May baseball season had opening here Sunday, when the local team walloped Cashmere, § to 1, Adams and Allen formed the | winning battery. 2.—The ite we the Test ef Time. Mest of our present patronage te | recommended by our rly custom: re, whose work f« till giv Ank our customers w Chadbourne Lost fatiefaction- 4 our work Ox to Spokane Reds | re in RA ae a aa ‘with you. | | Tho efforts mado by Cal Ewing y ab wa Rate |or the Oakland club to send Out fielder Chadbourne to Spokane were stopped when the Vernon wr ail ow. club of the Coast league claimed Oy geatta Wreacr-Paserass On, Chadbourne for the waiver price. | crafty old man of the ring would/ h hie lips cut and) nder was more rugged and ag-| Jeff and Fitz Meet jseemed more like {pointing to the dog grand | xc hE 1917, by HC, Fisher. fark Rew U & Prt Orticed .Copyry Trate BY BUD FISHER. ne) JUST THROW 'GM over. Hees Toma ONG ATA TING, Jere'Le BG SBURM TO ALE Me im 2 CAveHT EM AND UD Mate To HANG TO LIG TOHIM eC7crerrrswmwmwmr™>>OOOOOeeee ee eee | BEATS WELSH i} } , Critics at the ringside In New York last night gave Johnny | ‘ VICTORY | FINALLY | IS WON Kilbane elght of the ten rounds he fought with Lightweight Champion Freddie Welsh. The two will undoubtedly be called upon to put on @ bout where decisions are allowed in the near NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE future. If they do, Kilbane will enter the ring a big favor: nm Loat. Pet over his heavier opponent. +. 2 2 ‘hee 9. 4 oe ; +. oe a te “o | be w VANCOUV B. C, May 2— | Putt 4% over one tally in the ninth after the score had been tied, Se attle won yesterday's ball game here from Vancouver, 3 to 2. Ed- die Klein twirled a good game for the visitors, The official score: R HPO A B ae eat eer ¢ ¢ 3. 36 ee cy i -@5-@ 1 2 -@ ee i €2455. 8 o 16 @ ' eee. t 6 0 Poe oe | eye ° sme MF ninth | Rk. H. PO. A B . . ee oo £ 28 aly aie ie aa oe Se ee et ae a | oo) 2 ee ¢ 04 e8 4 £4 3538 ee ee a © 6 60 6 @ bases—Vane pitched ball— Kets. Hite—Off Kien, 3 8% innings; eff Dalley, o 0 runs in % inning. Struck out— Kiein 4, by Dailey 1 TACOMA WINS Tacoma 5-9-1, Butte 0-6-6. ; Hunt, Hydorn At Pillett and Stevet ‘and Kafora. SPOKANE LOSES At Spokane 2-7-3, Great Falls 7-0, Zwiefel and Baldwin; Clark on Jeffries’ Faria =<: Gory ‘8 Pigeons i in 200-Mile Race R. T. Gurlyn's pigeons won the Seattle Racing Pigeon club's 200- mile race for old birds, held last Sunday, from Salem, Ore, to Se- attle, venty-nine birds from 15 lofts competed. British Welterweight Win Over Griffiths LOS ANGELES, May 2.— ! one-time opponents ‘Btood be Bob Fitzsimmons’ eyes were neath a peach tree blooming fairly popping as he stepped | full and pink, Jeff broke off a from the motor which had car- twig and laid it against Fitz's ried him to the ranch of Jim | lapel. Jeffries one day recently | The same wistful look remained during the time of his vaude (on Fitz's face as it came time to ville engagement here. bid good-bye. Giving a final glance On all sides were indications about the ranch, he asked of prosperity and contentment, “Jim, won't you come in and see and the man who had lost the | me before I go?” heavyweight title to Jeffries e I will, Bob.” seemed to sense that the latter m going to make you a horse- had taken good care to invest shoe, Jim.” } hie savings sensibly and profit. | “I got one you made me, Bod.” Ea ae 4 | “You'll sure come in, Jim? |, COLUMBUS, 0. May 3-—Ted Jeffrice was handfeeding | “Sure, Bob; good-bye.” Lewis, the English welterweight, some Holstein calves as Bob | Joff watched after the auto as it Scored a victory over Johnay arrived on the scene. jeped down the dusty road. Then Griffiths here last night, im their 2-round fracas. “"Bilo, Jim," was the Corntsh-/he turned and said man's greeting as Jeff, clad in =, “Fitz tsn't a bad fellow, He never | ~ old blue jumper, cap and soiled |did anyone any harm YOU KNOW THAT trousers, emerged from the cor —— . Improper meaguree rather than disease are ver: Jott did's little shuffle and am ited | broadly as he walked up to Fitz. 4 jJohn L. Sullivan Is otten ihe. eeuae ce your “Sure glad to * you, Bob, was| i the hearty grecting as they sbook| Ready to Fight With 1 treat a bands, Fitz wore a Prince Alb " ‘ : DERS of coat and @ silk hat, as became his Germans Under T eddy can eae role of “Evangelist,” a role, by the What do you know about this? way, of which Jeffries seemed somewhat skeptical John L. Sullivan has offered to en was real wonderment In old | 10°° Roosevelt, should the latter |come to me for Reliable Wasserman Bob’ he continually |{*ke @ regiment of soldiers to Blood Test 0! eyes y | Hurope. “I may bea bit old,” says DR, DONAWAY Qazed at Jim and then over the prosperous farm. In fact, during 302-3-4 egg Debting an and Third, © MEN Get Well the Quickest an@ Safest Way Small feos, easy pay- ments. All diseases. Blood Jobn, “but you may take my word stay Fitz| for !t that ff ever I get to close small boy in| Quarters with the enemies of the * mlavaate| ’merican Eagle, I'll give them a awe of some daredevil playmate] (iy watlops that they'll rememb than the only man who, at one time, | ber all their lives.” Two other old- stood between his rancher friend and| (yr Miner endorse” who have otferod tho world’s title, Fitz realised that| ("eit under Roosevelt Kid 7" his money and|‘? ents ach siti tebd Jeffries had saved McCoy and Battling Nelson, tnvested {t wisely —_————— Of course Jeffries’ greatest 4 a Montana Youth Will | his pride is the big Holstein bull, King Segis, which reigna ma- a na tests of every kind. Con- Jestically on the ranch, and Try With Spokane sultation free Twelfth Bob was escorted immediately | . Ques, | year. Dr. Macy, Epler to the pen. : Frank Jones of Missoula, the vet issued perenapessibin’ oki “Ob, Jim, ‘e's @ woppert” ¢X-\ eran scout, has recommended San- ET claimed Bob, with bis cockney | derson, the University of Mon. twang. Then they inspected other tana siugging outfielder, to Nick | " fine stock, and the barest reference | Witiams.. The Spokane boss has made to ring days was when 80 /¢onwarded a contract for Sander | ' ancient looking Airedale dog trot: son to eign. | f ted slowly down a road imines “That's old Jeff, Bob,” said Jim, . At Boise, Idaho, next Friday | TRUSS TORTURE at| night, Pete Visser, of Ogden, ny [Gan pe, gimneyeo Or wearing the | H Christensen of (¢ “openhagen, jhe” free trial to prove its superter “You remember I had him Rowardennan.” Ip rah ight ill Rowardennan was the camp at| Denmark, heavyweights, will wres- " 4. LUNDRERG 00, which Jeffries trained for tho|tle to a finish, M07 Third Ave Johnson battle before the fight | jams en _ wd Mento wore poled for » plotare IF I KNEW YOU AND YOU KNEW ME on a rail fence with Bob holding a I would not have to spend good money Bible. Fitz was supposed to be reading it to Jeff, in keeping with his newly adopted vocation of evar gelist, W they dropped down off the fence Jeff bluntly re marked “If you are going to be an evangelist, Bob, don't be a hypocrite about it. We've got too many religious hypocrites | running around loose now.” | Fitz flushed, but mad ply. A moment late: to tell you that I treat ONE-HALF medicin men, women and children for all kinds of dise That my office charge ts $1.00 cash, DR. EVANS 401 People's Bank Bidg., Second and Pike the regular fee included 10am. to6 pm 7pm. tos am Sun, 11 to 12 m. ac peennemeane enero ag ernest ore ee nae oe mnie emt me Ne A | 4 | i

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