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Written By Experts ! Broadway. Pays i Everett This Week oven ‘ \F Her Keer Ue THES Boor hui HAVE. TO Gore HE HOSOTTAR at the Broadway preparing a monster The students high school are excursion to B when their te RAE Si eA I Ah in = HO aac years the team has played in Ta and about 500 students have always ae companied it. This year the man agers could not arrange a game for that city, so the students had to fall back on Everett as the place of their invasion. Tickets will be sold at the school which will be good for a round trip to Everett and an admis to the These will not be placed on owever, until Manager McKa for the boat with th mpany. Last year t atudents took both the Indianapolis and the Flyer on their Tacoma trip. While it is practically certain that Broadway will take the game by at least three touchdowns, Everett is strong this year, and might give the locals the surprise of their lives Coach Lewis is not going to let his men go into the game feeling over gaine, sale. ’ confident. That was what lost the é Tacoma game. He Ia putting them y through some pretty stiff practice | t this week. OGDEN OFFERS _ $80,000 PURSE ! (By United Press.) OGDEN, Utah, Nov. 9%.—Tele “grams were sent to Jack Johnson CHOOL TEAMS WORKING THE STAR TUESDAY, [MN Lincoln High Has. / | | Two Tacoma | HE SPOKANE TWENTY-MILE RACE CAME OUT JUST AS THE! T runners figured in the dope, and undoubtedly the best man won but there are a lot of enthusiasts tn who looke tw nee John D. Marsh returned a winner, and who would have Iked to see ames the game Winnlpegger make it horse and horse with the Frenchman | Those who have followed the runners (figuratively, of course, f jheaven help anyone who tries to follow that quartet around the track) atill believe that Marsh has an even chance with St, Yves over the The members of the Lincoln high], ‘. CO eee err re buck in the city, |2@mile route, and the next meeting between the two will be watched y the Hill M with interest cde nf <a rp agents The y race was told in endurance rather than d th ¥ : to the tact that for t weather conditions ¢ not have been much t is represented by a good toa The t plowed thelr way thre s wea of mud for lay ee See Sa itnd Sade be tie ' thé going being so heavy that a running shoe looked more gtudents th at f ar after one round of th This ts not the von aga fmol going that sults Marsh, for the Canadian ia a stocktl that Linpetn t 1/man, who packs a lot of wel and who has never been at t win tt ad the mad. Marsh won the Butte Marathon two months ago on @ The yMpusbed hard| muddy track, and he told the writer after that race that he w uta | na Coach Allen know ther go double the distance on firm ground than rep the per oro It fa not the Intention to belittle St. Yves' vietory of Sunday Abn las The little Frenchman has shown himself not only a speed! against marvel, but one of the gamest men that ever went on a track. But he difference of opinion that makes horse racing makes foot ra x d as Marsh still believes that he can beat St. Yves at 20 jr of his reasons for thinking #0 are of interest to the fans o 00 STANLEY KETCHEL 18 IN SERIOUS TROUBLE OVER HIS Broadway fall The “As purchased a new $6,000 desire to equal the pace set by his late conqueror ing to live up to his name in his last battle after the fight, injured a Japane joy ride, auto a day of w and last Sunday ran down and sertously . while coasting down the San Francisco hills on @ Prominent Japs have retained an attorney and will prosecute Ketchel with the avowed intentic making an example of him. 4 reports say that Ketchel was joy riding, and a man that gets sted for speeding four times in as many weeks, must expect to par the brunt of public opinion in cases of accident. Just th@sgme, { have noticed t the people who get Interested tn thelr maghing paper just as they start to cross a crowded stre or who pefpigt tn riding a bike the wrong way of the traffic, are the ones that shally t laid out by autos, Ketchel may have been entirely to blame, but let’a not ly him until the if be is a fighter. t facts of the case come out In court, éven oo 0 THE CRY AGAINST MASS PLAYS AND MOMENTUM FORMA | tions in football comes re but this yoar| nd as regularly as the anons, the call for changes in the rules is louder and more tnststent than ever, by reason of the fatalities that have marred the present season. | been played, and the other, between| There Ix no doubt that the deaths and serious injuries that have 2 | Broadway and Lincoln, will be| charged up against football have turned many agalnat the gadié as It played some time just before or . OS 4 rar ine +. tf tan dub utter Phenbeatving. is played in America today, and it mas probable that when the rule- | Although the Spokar am has} makers get together, they will at least give the suggestions for opening lost several of its best players this! up tho play, serious consideration. year, the men that are left have the true fighting spirit, and are Aside from the actual need for changes in the rules along this line, able to make things warm for any| would not football be a better game for both players and spectators if and James J. Jeffries at New York | school team. The strong State Col bE by “Jimmie” Dunn, offering a “purse | lege team was only able to win out the forward er onside kick bap used — frequently? Ac ttea | ; of $80,000 for the Jeffries Johnson | from them by a small score and nicety of execution is what wo want, rather than che mere appli fight to be held in Ogden during the| Although Spokane lost a practice | cation of so many tons of dead wolght. | e to the ft e Coow 1 Adene National Woolgrowers convention, | me ‘0, ‘he Vie oe the menern oo° | January 4 to 9. Jit is much the stron, high schooi 8 muc e strot t high school . Ton aye that be wil boile an | Soe, Pnc™ ibe strongest heh schoo! SOMEONE TRIED TO SPRING THAT NO-OVERNIGHTS sTurF, | : auditorium if he is successfui in se-| Idaho. that the Jacksonville management started, at the Oakland track, and| curing the fight. The officials for the game have/ the wires have been kept hot with a bunch of denials ever since. Pool | not yet been selected. rooms or no pool rooma, “blind” racing, with neither welghts nor dis * kk AK RR eee eH het | tances announced until the thwe of the race, Is almost too good # Joke 2 VALE-HARVARD GAME *lto be seriously considered. It can never be made to stick, and the| * THE FINAL TEST. #| bare possibility of such a condition of affairs raises a how! from owners, * * | jockeys, players, layers, and even the hot dog man. It’s unfair to Tom ¥ wNEW, YORK, Now. « | wuttams and his associates to suppose for a moment that they would | * the Yale-H %} fall for any such experiment, but just the same it’s a relief to note “4 Fre Lanys 9g oes pod | that they nailed the rumor as a le before {t gained general circulation. i & gridiron championship for 1909. & oo 0 7 . * Although the Yale-Princeton & OGDEN !8 IN THE FIELD WITH AN OFFER OF $80,000 FOR THE i * game, which is to be played & i fac ice 0 ul & next Saturday, will bea big #| DIK fight, provided that ft Is held between January 4 and 9, at the time i #& card from a sentimental stand- *| of the National Woolgrowers convention, in the Utah ctty f inf en Pl y outclassed. bo Lay you that this proposition will be accepted, and you can write | ; |% Frem the openin~ of the sea- | your own ticket. No one, not even Jeff, could pull wool over the eyes poor ims Sees tee cae rot S| of that Ogden crowd. They know too much about the business.” * contenders in the field for the ®/ oo° % championship, and the elevens */ ATHLETIC CLUBS ARE SPRINGING UP ALL OVER THE CITY, & representing these two univer- #] i. cusohs. te 2h th of t # sities are as strong as any that #| like toadstools in the path of those who go mushroom hunting. Seattle * preceded them in recent #| wants fights, and three-round boxing bouts are the next best thing. ig Tvask sien tha tbl. chen 4 “Both members of dis club!!! - | |* pionship from Yale, and the #| = eee i & latter institution is determined #/ : # to turn the tables this year. ? GEORGE BRAUN, JIU- JITSU i \* *| | WMEAETEOA EXPERT, NOW IN SEATTLE } | MATCH ON AGAIN! | PR isi agnew f George Braun, who is to meetiom on ball 2; object ball cushions i a reed) fee Ito In jiu jiteu match here|at A, B, C, D, resting at E. | ter Perec J next Friday night, arrived in Diagram Cue ball right. ob SAN FRANCISCO, Nov “The | attle this 5 hing, after being held | ject ball \& left stroke neerhels n | Wolgast-Powell match is on again, | UP 54 te hours on his trip from |excess of medium. Cue ball cush belie Wits Mike eauanentie & an Francisco by @ tunnel cave-tn. | jon A, B, effecting carom on |celved word from Ed Smith, sport-|that he feels confident of lowerin ing editor of a Chicago newspaper Ito's ‘colors. On the trip wer he ary Solid Comfort Gas| that Tom Jones, Wolgast’s man lo a virtue of necessity, and ke ept ager, Red, pocted $200 ance |up his training, 'Munts whic “hej Stove and Heater 50c |money with him. Hester demand. |‘™'? Was stall ed $500, but he is satisfied withhe ze * ee ee ee 7 |the amount posted. | Wolgast leaves Milwaukee to-| # DAILY LESSON IN * | night for New Orleans where he|* BILLIARDS, . | fights Henri Piet on November 14,|™ ; * * whether it be an Overcoat or Suit, always gets a royal good bar- gain. Always $15 Get the ‘‘*Regai’’ label in your next garment. eee ee eee ete eee ee 615-619 First On the Square Opposite Totem Pole ee WELCH WINS FROM JOHNNY SUMMERS. LONDON, Nov. 9.—The long expected fight between Freddie Welch and Johnny Summers came off last night before ¢ National Sporting club, and Welch w returned a winner after 20 rounds of fast milling. Welch forced the fighting from the tap of the first gong, and went at his man-hard in every round. He showed great form, and had no difficulty in ee ieee ee ee eS Comfort Heater boll an e«m@, make « r a steak in a jiffy. The nfort will change the tem prber slay 7 Summers through- erate sized room 10 out the it, but was unable to seconds. Don't slip over the deciding punch, any longer The winner was presented with “ will cost you 1 gold and diamond studded / laa } bel after the fight by Lord suffering. It Lonsdale. ing cooking Shin REE HI EHHHHibbbbH eee eee ee Fitzherbert’s Record. ‘ It ts odorless Hunsen burner, which In PIMLICO, Maryland, Nov. 9— with you when moviag Vitzherbert, with 128 pounds up, te e, you call and a broke the worlds record for two [how It works when passing. “Matlod niles in the third race at the Pim ma.” ee Neo track this afternoon by cover | A ptice of 600 on a comfort giver ina tee Ristann ts ts : luke in a mere pittance of ite at eis in 986 8, | worth. "At almont no expense you | made by Judge Denny at the Ouk-|SLOWED AND TWISTED CUE| Your frend thankegiving. " land track, when the horse ran the | Diagram 1 a 6 Ye center, ob distance in 8:26 1-2, with 105| ject bal 16-16 left; stroke ordin 1310 | | pounds up. |Cue ball, being slowed, oftects car ‘SPINNING SECOND AV. | CE, ILE ~ eens carer only 18 when he secured an interna- NOVEMBER 9, 1909 RACING SEASON IS 3EST PLAY I EVER SAW MADE OVER IN THE ON FOOrBALL | One of the simplest mont ation that deca 5 Bed ; oi oniae the on at the instant the ee 4 | kick can be ado, is from & punt! itself was ex pos . | formation it an ih @ play HBetore | brought success to Penneylvanta od wuardebere wen § | the Michigan game of 190 “us, The quarterback (iy United Pree.) The pl ' y number of ‘ | of pla NEW YORK, Nov. 3 | rd line ed in the ist. ” Bi: ern racing season end shown in In the @umeie ith the running of the | ently to punt, the Michigan r ' # the reat bor stake at Aqueduct back, Quarterback K : ore ae i F: has been here for » v made an on ms of this ho f pire City track od i ff some days ago, the Aqueduct C management refused to extend its f for sting over the open dates, | has it defense a9 Ten Paces won the feature event] the men eligible to { yesterday's Aqueduct card, and a a re taken care of, thas arge crowd saw the running of the enn of the pany mitoo also closed yesterday, and the movement of the racing stables » the South and West will start in a few days COLLEGE RUGGERS READY FOR GAME (fy United Pree) BAN FRANCISCO, Nov, O0-—A anvase of the two teame today in- ates that the annual intercol- + football game between and California on the! THE PLAY THAT DEF eaves MICHIGAN, Saturday will be ntented game ever nh the two universitios pus afer ahead. Gallagher, the Pennsylvania that it can be played from nes diet ak ne DR. ALBERT MULFORD, = ftackic, picked up the ball on the tion that might mean « rau strongest team which has been de- bound and 1 over the line for or m kick, It is meat to ved at Palo Alto since Hugby ound and 4 over the or a was adopted as a substitute BY OR. ALBERT MULFORD |a ¢ ; rucna what is coming oy Amertoan football Chairman Pennsylvania University’s | ex! as played Dla actually off. ¢ not @ whit leas co to the Board of Advisory Coache i « strength of the biu vid . } upon a definit strong fold fif-| Of all the plays Introduced on ntratesy plays a Jal critics conced oh | the stidiron tn the last ten yea s to be on artial erith concede to each I consider the outside kick the moat is tot atul am an excellent chance of victory. | verective Its poasibilities have | have many The Stant ord forward MetUle not by any means been exhaunted. | y an gr f 4 fastest pack ¢ A been scarce ap-| in th elves the uid have American Rugby team. |! Ro 9 -? apsaal ase os opti: t followed # Cfawford, Pemberton, Horton, Pit- |? y ting and Minturn » te in wtat ' ure and weight, and are remark here tonight for orld’s heavy~- Al sly fet of toot STANLEY WINS | here tonight for the, ie Jempite this fact, however, the | Goteh is @ 2 to 1 favorite over the California forwarda ‘have. dispioyed | 20-MILE RELAY) ,,0':" ae such excellent defensive ability and The winner very probably will be Barta sch aggroanivences in thelr at-| (My United Pree) pe od by Zybysco, the giant (By United k that veteran Rugby players} VICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 9—Wt Mahmout, who recently re-| SAN FRANCISCO, Nort » have seen both teams in action m Stanley, the San Franc » ron to country from Bul- local Japanese colony bas) superior to their oppo-| ner, made a fine showing here | neste night in his race against three of waee . wai rentied bis in the back field both teame are | the best distance men in British Co- Stanley Ketchel, strong, but the Stanford backs have |jumbia. According to the terms of} BUICK WINS champion prise made so many spectacular runa|the race, Stanley waa to beat Bay- fe) ‘tnjared through scattered * that their at five miles, Broughton of Port- PHOENIX RACE ¢sy ras San bis te rooters say they will show to bet-| land at 10 miles, and Rowan of Na- bara, a Japanese: $6,000 automobile, Ketchel was te he had been and violating the ter advantage than the blue and os gold players in the big game. 27 Betting on the game promises to é ie. be very brisk, ae the adherents of at 20 miles. Stanley finish ahead of Broughton and Rowan, but could not score a win from Baylis over the shorter distance. His time! (Ry United Pree) PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov. 9—The Buick car, driven by J. K. Nikrent, both teasm: gine be gage for, the 20 milon was 2 hours 6 sec-| 4. the annual Los Angeles-to This meked the fourth tne th will probably prevail, with « possl- Phoenix road race .oday, crossing | Kete been aa bility that Stanford will rule GOTCH WRESTLES the finish ine at the territorial fair | months on charges slight favorite when the game be- grounds at 1:06:23 o'clock this aft- | speed law, kine RAICEVICH TONIGHT | ernoon. “| George Siddons, A. Brown, of Sheffield udlted soe- 7 The second car to finish was the | Sno was © cer football eleven of England, was (By United Pree) | Isetta, driven by Max Poisman. It ¢.a:nerweights about @ CHICAGO, 9.—-Frank Gotch | finished .0 minutes behind Nikrents tht claims to have @ ‘and Giovanni Raicevich will wrestle | Buick lin Tommy Kilbane tional football cap. of steel ranges are wasteful and extravagant because they are not built In the right way or even of the right kind of material It ts not wise to buy a range that is not constructed right, nor yet to continue using one even though you may have had it only The common sort This Solid Oak Dresser, finished golden, designed as pictured with straight front and shaped top, size afew years, Its seams have already opened | of case 19x40 inches, up, the stove bolts worked loose, the putty | heavy led plate mir- fallen out of the seams, the air leaks into | ror, size 18x24 Inches, the flues and fire-box, causing a waste of | plain, neat toilet stand- fuel every year equal to a large part of the | ard. This dresser regu- cost of a Monarch. We will take your old range at its full value as part payment on a@ Monarch larly sells for $17.00. 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