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PAGE 4 THE SEATTLE STAR BUD RIDLEY FACES REAL COME MITCHELL EDDIE WHITE | TRIS SPEAKER SEEMS SADLY BRITISH TO TRY SPEED MARKS SIMONICH _ BEATS DALEY IN NEED OF GOOD CATCHERS pee FENN RELAY BOX DRAW C% oan sing ones lan mete Ph lars he fina f thie r DANDY DILLON Neer Js we IN DRAW BOUT away formed creditably ABE FRIEDMAN WINS ere in BOSTON, 4. | Beit New England April STRIBLING WINS BY K. 0. uy April 26.— Young champion, wa, Va ' . Nee, He "| Tomm: Daily Doings of The Star’s Funny S aw GEE nNOw 1 LOVE BETTER'N anv “4 ELSE IN TH WORLD AN BESIDES FLL GIVE WA THD B16 1 Sarees a my ys Aw CMON JANIE AN GIVE ME A BITE OF YER LANDY - DON'T YA REMEMBER YESTERDAY 1 ove vA a BITE & MY CHOLULATE CIOAR ? 1 WAS FiIKIN® YER COLL BED - 1T BLD A LOT So 'T HOR me ig and 1 OONT WANT ALL YER CANDY - JANIE you TAKE THIS Piece! | -~ ¥ pic OLD HOME TOWN [ima NO-NO- 1 ISNOWDe WHERE You |= (CAN CATCH EM WIitHouT/ 7 EVEN IF A FELLER GRABBED SUMBN O YOURN AN RUN HE ge ° | Fish POL.ES~ RAKES - ONION SETS & 5fe¢ EVERY MAN IN TOWN SEEMS To LEAN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER «GUT ) DONT SEE A ONE . WHO LEANS IMPROVEMENT CLUB, 1S GREATLY cor OVER THIS YEARS GARDEN OvUTLOOK- BY BLOSSER me) ( LoRsE NUTHIN'!' yA V3 NEVER SAW 4 HORSE BEIN KEPT IN A HOUSE T SCARE BURGLARS AWAY, DID YA P HO, WUITIE © WHAT'S Tu’ MOST USEFULEST ANIMAL? TM TRYIN TO TELL ALEK IT'S A DOG AN’ HE WON'T BELIEVE ME YA KNOW WHATS | 1 MOST USEFULEST OF ALL ANIMALS, ALEK F why, ors DoE SHO#CHICKLENS \S THE USEFULEST ANIMAL. THEY 1S = You c'N EAT "EM ‘FO THBY'S HATCHE: WERE COMES WHITIE — YOU ASK WIM AN 1 BETCHA HELL DRAKE RELAY OPENING DAY t | tler cial | coma BY STANLEY > BACK TEST IN MEETING DILLON Local Feather to Make Long Layoff, Due to Br: Frankie Ellis; Dillon Ca ] N meeting Dandy featherweight div a real They fight will face Ridley i He broke hi several times. topping Frankie ouple of rounds, La Second Start Thursday Ridley Made Good Showing in First Fight After His oken Arm, When He Beat n Fight and Is Sure Tough oughest eggs in the Bud R ¥, local bat. ck test next Thursday in Ta. nee his long layoff, é was re-fractured a he looked good in [ Feeling Better | “Rea” Killefer, Seattle's popular ° | diamond leader, hasn't exactly bees ¢, when Carl Lance suddenly a furry of al corner. They | xe Other results were as follows; | 0 pounds—Johnny Crawlett won Monte Sewell by decision in © rounds. pounds—Nick Spagnollo ‘beat | Manning; four rounds; decis-; pounds—-Tony Eddo beat Dean In three rounds. 49 pounds—Jimmio Rierdon beat Rocco Antio in four. 120 pounds—Archie Byran won f » Lem Swain when the latter | alled to respond for the second round. The card was handled {n a snappy manner and Mickey Hannon did his | stuff as referee quite nicely—altho | he failed to block two wild swings at one instance. However, he managed to survive the round. BIG CROWD . SEES SHOW AT ARMORY VER 600 spectators witnessed a | good boxing card staged at the | Armory Friday night. The bouts were between the 146th field artillery of the National Guard and the regulars at Fort Lawton. 3 Guy Meister,- of Battery E opped Jouret, of Fort Lawton, in the third round. Schreauder, of Battery C, knocked yut Woodruff, of Fort Lawton, in he third seasion, Bradley, of Fort Lawton, stopped Hathaway, of the Guards, In the second round. King, of the fort, put Walte, of the Guards, away in the second. Madison, of the Guards, and Fielding of the fort, fought a fast ~ six-round draw, Keller, a Guardsman, held McKen- zie, a regular, even, while Young Firpo got a draw call with Cooper, of the Guards. Douglas McDonald acted as ref. breaking into tears over the shov- |ing of his Indians im thele fire | three games at home, Im fact, the , | Red Dog ts in pretty 906d humor these days. BigEnglish Crew Races Have Past Bore April 26.— Eightythre: years ago Oxford and Camibrids universities staged thelr first row- tng contest. That was on April 14, 1841. Today, after 77 renewals, the at nual struggle of the shells is still re- garded as one of England's greatest sportive classics. A crowd of upward of 100,000 is nothing out of the ordi- nary when the old rivals get to- gether. Oxford-Cambridge contests are to the English folk what Yale-Harvanl and Army-Navy football games are to the Americans. They hold top place to the sporting fraternity. bridge 36, with the ing in a dead heat. Oxford twice has won nine straight times, 1861 to 189? and 1890 to 1898. has turned the trick five successive y the race this year. $$$ OMAHA, Neb., April 26.—Dav: Shade, California welterweight, ¥°" the decision over Morris , eres, while Capt. Charles Hutchin- son and Thomas Glenn were the judges. f Omaha, in a 10-round scrap here bs night. ge EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO SAND SCC TELL You, EvERETT, THAT YOU WOVLPN'T FESGL SO GROUCHY IF You ADOPT THE SAME KIND OFA DIST. wm FOLL OF PE! MY HEAD IS AS CLEAR AS A BECL — Se i Fecu FINS! | cer’s TAP WwouLdD WHY, Qt . (8, US (hes pees AND SEG | ' ‘ .