The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 3, 1919, Page 12

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Cone ‘Eve ‘A tinuTe! ' Washington Still H as. _ Strength Cost Washington the Game BY LEO H. LASSEN While the chances of the Purple and Gold eleven to climb Slim Chance to Earn Tie in Pacific Coast Grid Conference; Oregon Meets Pullman ' Washington Handed Short End of Score by Oregon; Dobie Wins Again; Ohio State Leads Big Ten; Dailey Pegged; Smith Joins Squad Again; Oregon's Great Reserve DID YOU HEAR ABOUT PASSIN' SY UNCLE Awny ? to a tie for the Coast football are slimmer now than a new dime, their fate for the season will just about be settled Saturday, when Oregon, conquerers of the Purple and Gold, play Washington State at e City. a 4 put the big dent in Washington’s title aspirations ip of Dame Fate and a pounding attack. Saturday at Denny field, with Washington's defeat leaves Oregon and he state team as the only undefeated elevens in the conference. i : : ~ If Oregon can ring up a win, they will have practically clear shiling for the title, but if fashington State wins, Washington has a chance to tie the league up into the well-known ot if they beat Pullman on the 15th. | allen to Put in Bid for Club 's 1919 Pilot Wants to Purchase Coast Team | * * # * * ot for Sale, Says Bill Slee Charley Mullen, who managed the Seattle club during closing weeks of the 1919 Coast league campaign, i in the field to buy the Seattle ball club. He will make his ffer to the Seattle club directors at their annual session be held Wednesday. lien said he was in the field to buy the club for him-| and a second party whose name he could not disclose Mullen expects to receive an offer from the directors | _ their price. : : F Bill Klepper, secretary of the club, said this morning tat the club was not for sale and that the value of the b could not be determined until the club “ot going” and ie big overhead expense was cut down. He said the report , as just a rumor. CE v4 University of Pittsburg football teams, coached by Glenn Warner since 1915, won 31 collegiate battles without a defeat since the veteran took charge, until the setback at Syracuse's hands, October 18, by 24 to 3 points. Meeting Soon ey, Favorite for Job, Is) ith Klepper; To Elect New President ‘s alltmportant baseball it which the local directors ir president for next and the manager for the will be held Wednes- , present secretary has returned from a sh, with the announce- it he will back Mike Kelley, r of the pennant winning ean association club during the year, for the po® of manager. himself, is the leading for the presidency of the as Jim Brewster, 1919 prexy, his intention of not Horris, outside left of the Hamil- ton (Canada) Great War Veterans team may play with the champion Bethichem soccer team this season. Colgate and Syracuse football elevens will clash at Syracuse, No vember 15. The University of Utah sur- prised the dopesters by defeat ing the Montana Aggies 66 to © at Salt Lake. The Utah clan was expected to win, but not by such a large majority. Soccer football ts one of the few sports at Dartmouth college open to freshmen for varsity competition Providence enjoys legalized Sunday football. The University of Southern Cali fornia keeps on winning. Saturday {it defeated Occidental College 27 to [0 at Los Angeles. Elmer Hender son, who coached the Broadway Hi elevens, is doing the Gil Dobie | stunt. hundred and forty boys are In. the Queen Anne Soccer which have been established Charlie Norman of the Y. M. C. A. on service. ‘One league operates at the Coe grounds and the other at the playfield. In the Coe league bur teams come from the Coe school, from John Hay and two from Queen Anne. In the lower five from Warren and Foal In the Coe league games are played school on Wednesdays, Thurs- and Fridays, while the Mercer ts are run off at noon of the same days. “Everybody play!" is the big motto | “Of the “Y" extension service. Nor-| | man has his offices at the Leibly ing at Queen Anne ave, and Bos-| at. “Shy” Huntington carried Manyerd off of the field on his shoulders after Saturday's game here. “Shy” \had a right to feel elated over the showing made by his little quarter Eastern collegiate soccer season will begin November 1. Nine cities are represented in the| tate three cushion billiard] Series this season, namely: Detroit, | Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Pitts , Cincinnati, Akron, Buffalo and | Cleveland. \ SPORTING GOODS STORE! Ly) Dance With the B American Legion ‘The Elmer J. Noble Post | No. 1 is ntertaining Thursday, November 6 the Masonic Temple. Dance With the American Legion ‘ University of Illinois school athletic coaches has 75 students. for Fordham university will basketball, abolished here 115. revive in 1914 Tommy Murphy again heads the Grand circuit money-winning drivers. Wisconsin university cross country squad numbers 300 athletes Pennsylvania expects to issue 325, 000 hunters’ licenses, costing $1 | each at Q| Mayor Church of Toronto favors | constructing three athletic stadiums | to accommodate the citizens’ athletic | activities, | pus & ra Forty-five species of insects are re- & Tas. corded as attacking the walnut tree SECO! in the United States, while only 15 IND AVE, jattack the English walnut in Ba BRING THIS AD ‘Will repair any American “atch, no mi it rope. Junt jovernment— rong U. & ARMY WAIST BELTS, Durehased from U. 8. 10,000 Heavy Khaki Web we Pay Cash for Diamonds | and Liberty Bon: bronze buckie; can be used as auto LUCIO’S JEWELRY CO. ity A strap, belts and other purposes, 200, KIRK'S MILITARY SHOP, 1209 First Avenue, m™ Dr. Edwin J. Brown Seattle's Leading Dentist 106 Columbia st _|in the Big Ten conference Saturday That Oregon-Pullman game should be a thriller if the teams play up to form, as they are both made up of veterans, and with the ti at stake, there won't be any }lost that one will be able to notice. | Coach Hunt, of Washington, hasn't | given up hope, because, his team | }was far from classed Saturday, and with two weeks to drill for the Washington Staters, the Purple and |Gold crew are still very much in [the chase | Next Saturday the Washington men willl tackle the Albfleet team. This should be a’ walkaway for the college boys, altho the Navy team |eave them a serap at the start of| |the year, Following the Navy tlt, jthe Washington crew tackles the| |farmers from Pullman, and then they meet the California Bears here ! of the year. | OREGON RESERVE WON GAME Oregon's wonderful reserve strength cost Washington the game Saturday, During the firm half the Play was fairly even with the visit ors leading, 14 to 6, scoring one of the touchdowns on 4 fluke. Bin) Steers, the star of the Oregon back field, during the first half, was forced to the sidelines by injuries after scoring one of Oregon's touch downs almost singlehanded. The second touchdown was lucky a# the Visitors blocked a punt and an Ore gon man fell on the ball over the Washington line, Then the Wash- Ington men started and marched the| j ball down the fied on straight line bucks, At the start of the second half Washington again started their | campaign for a touchdown and made the score 14 to 13, with Oregon lead ing, when Coach Huntington, of the Webfodters, rushed a string of second team players into the fray, Their second string men proved to be bet-! ter than the men who started the game. “Skeet” Manuerd, the midget quarterback, played wonderful foot. | ball during the second half, His playing was reeponsible for the last 10 points scored by the Lemon and! {Green aggregation. He put up the| same brand of football that young} Sharp, the California crack of a few years ago, demonstrated. Luck was| again a strong factor in the scoring | of the last touchdown as one of the Oregon forwards dropped a forward pass after moving « couple of steps and another Oregon man grabbed |the ball and crossed the line with }it. A pretty drop kick from the 20 yard line by young Manuerud count ed the last three points of the game. Oregon's great reserve strength and luck were the big factors Saturday The final score was Washington 13 Oregon 24. | DAILEY WAS i | MARKED MAN | | Erve Dailey, Washington captain, was a marked man thruout the game} fand the Oregon forwards had him| |pegged, Dalley didn't get away for a decent gain thrvout the quarter. | Butler showed well on line bucks and so did Young Hyndmen, playing |his first real college game, Bob Abel ran the team well, but had \trouble with his passes, He had a [lot of chances for making long gains |by the aerial route but he threw the ball too far in most every play. The strong wind botheredghim some. | GEORGE ITH GETS IN GAME | George Smith, one of the veter- | ans of the Washington squad, | who was forced to quit the team | at the start of the season be- cause of his heavy course, got | in the game during the last few minutes. His appearance in a suit was a big surprise. George will be a great help to the Washington forwards if he can get in the fray for the rest of the season, 0. A. C, OUT OF RUNNING Altho the Oregon Aggies had a host of veterans to pick a team from | this season they | mue h ” on the They were handed the short end of |the count by California Saturday | which marks their second straight| defeat at the hands of the southern | teams. They were spanked by the | | Stanford team the week before. | shown | ked field OHIO STATE TAKES LEAD Dope was spilled in every direction when the Minnesota crew walked on Wisconsin by a big score and Tili- nols took the measure of Chicago. This is the big year for upsets in football, This gives Ohio the lead in the conference as they are the only undefeated squad. DOBIE WINS AGAIN Gil Dobie’s middies rung up an- other win when they hung the In- dian sign on the West Virginia Wes- leyan fit. Colgate and Dartmouth ted at one touchdown—7 to 7—in the big game of the Kast. West Virginia university turned in the big surprise when they walloped Princeton, 26 to 0. Thanksgiving day, in the final game t No, (T MUSTA BEEN VERY Suppen! JOIN MULTHOMAHS| “Hap” Miller, the greatest all around halfback ever turned out at the University of Washing. ton under the Dobie regi M wb team for the rest of { season, according to re ports from the Rose City, Miller is a justice of the peace at Vancouver, Wash the present time, and Manager Phil- broot the Winged M. club, is hard on his trail to take up the gridiron game again, There are few fans who wit nessed the California Washing. fon game here in 1916, which Washington won, 13 to 7, who will forget Miller's dash down | the field in the final minutes for a distance of the California line. ( The ball was carried over the last chalked line and Dobie and Washington were saved defeat. Upsets Still Feature Grid Tilts in East Colgate’s Title Rush Is Stop- ped; Gil Dobie Gets Revenge Colgate's rush hon in the Bast rude netback when nem Saturday at Hanover, Mans Colgate scored in the first quarter forward pass. Dartmouth’s as the of in the 4 nity of Pennsylvania were downed by Penn State] tune of 10 to 0, Pennnyl han piled up more points th than any other eastern to championship given Dartmouth tied ors were al result final pert came ‘ cked The eleven to the va weason team Gil Dobie's Middies sent the West Virginia Wesleyan squad home with| the short end of a 20 to 6 score The West Virginia squad handed! Doble hia first defeat & coach In 1917 when they detec the Mid dies by a single touchdown. In Middle West, Michigan & «reat rally in the final quarter defeated Northwestern 16 to 13. The Ann Arbor eleven made 14! points in the last period. Minnesota came thru predicted and out Wisconsin 19 to 7. Minnesota's gains were made on off.tackle plays. | lowa State, the leading candidate for the “Tig Nine” aonors, remained idle for the day Pullman Wins On the Coast Washington State showed that it would have to be counted in on the championship honors by the defeat administered to the University of Idaho at Pull | man i The W. 8 C. men did not get warmed up until the last half. At the end of the second period the score was 14 to 0. Beginning the} third quarter Coach Welk men took the ball down the field on line! bucks mixed with a few end runs.| Skadan and Moran both made touch downs in this period. Jenne added| to the total with a drop kick from the 40-yard line. Both period punt Univ the by e tired In the Line bucks with an sional punt, was all that was dished up to the fans. The ball was in Idaho's territory for the greater part | California«came thru in fine style by slipping ©. A. @, the small end of a 21 to 14 score | Rowe Stars j Rowe, California’s star half, went over the Aggie line for two touch downs in the first period. The sec ond came as the result of a 20-yard run. Not to be outdone the farmers came bac rong, making their first in the first five minutes the beginning of the seo | final ocea-| ns California kicked off to gies for the third period. Rose re ceived the kick and ran 70, yards| thru a broken field for the Oregon | men's final score. California stif-| ned and took tne ball down the field on line plunges, Wells finally | going over for a touchdown, | OA had the ball on the ard line in the final quarter when time was called | the Ag Gonmga handed the School of Mines 41 to 7 trimming. The Catholic squad outplayed their Montana opponents in every de partment. Montana | 0. A. Cs freshmen squad de- feated the Oregon babes 3 to 0, Over $3,000 was won and lost as the result, Stanford took St, Mary's College down the line 34 to 0. Templeton did some great kicking for the win ners. | Ivor Peterson, former Broadway Hi athlete, is playing left tackle for the University of Southern Califor nia, He scales around 190 pounds JUNIOR CAGE TO BE FORMED AT Y.M.C.A. Six teams will make up the junior house basketball league at the “Y" this season. The Triangle club will | enter two teams. © Swastikas, Lakesides, Seattle Boys’ club and the Dorm club are all expected to enter squads again, The Swastikas won the house league last season, There will be a meeting of the members conference at Rolling bay within the next two weeks, at which plans for the coming year will be laid, and the schedule and lineup for the cage season will be decided, NO CENT Hirt IT WAS, HE DIED OF SHOCK! Ceuccrarerry? THE LONG DRIVE SHOT. Dave. HerRROoM AMATEUR CHAMPION D BASY sHOTLERT Experience and Merry Anne toBe __ on Tap in Wednesday’s Ring Show Smith will start his training at the Arena gytti today at 4 p.m. He has had a couple of bouts in California during the past two weeks, and it won't take much training to get him in condition. Farmer is going thru his training stunts with Ole Anderson over in Ta- come, He will not come to Seattle w Wednesday, the day of the melee There won't be ck of experience Farmer, the Tacoma logger, steps thru his paces with Gunboat Smith at the Arena Wednesday night | Hoth of the battlers are among the real veterans of the game the Coast. Bmith has been a big figure in the fight game tn the country for nearly a decade. He has fought all the big fellows, and while he has lost many times, be has also ne white hope after white hope into ring obliv- | ton Frank Farmer holds a «tmilar post in the Northwest, as there isn't any man in these parts who can hold his own in the equared circle, with t posaible exception of Young Hector This pair hag never met. Prominent “Merry Annes” Bot men possess what is known in fighting circles as a pretty “Merry ing one of the foremost favorites in Anne,” or a sleep wallop in their the featherweight division by ha right mitts, We've seen Farmer's| punching ability, will take on Eddie ®tarboard crusher in action. What! Quinn, of Tacoma, in the third bout Smith can do still will have to be!on the card. demonstrated, Two other bouts will make up the This affair will be a six two-minute | program. Ralph Douglas will be tne round affair. | third man in the ring. any wall about, when Frank Ketcheli Meets Storey In the semi-windup, Young Ketch ell, the promising Milwaukee welter weight, will go up against Jimmy Storey, the local boy, who has never lost a ring mix. This looks like one of the best mills on the bill. Storey has a lot of ability, and Ketchell has shown that he is no slouch by his work i one tilt here. Eddie Jackson, who ts fast becom- His RIGHT , \_ PHONE NUMBER’ RAL GAVE GEE! How Dip it ‘ HAPPEN: 'World’s Series on Gridiron Is Being Planned in South. East to Meet West for Grid Title; San Francisco Would — Have Western Game; Commission to Decide Winning Teams; Here’s the Dope | BY DUDLEY BURROWS (N. EB. A. Staff Correspondent) Nov. 3.—"The)in the game all over the count championship | just as the soccer championships lin England.” eh, boy? One| Nichols says that his plan ts m distance to|ly an elabe paying a | adopted—ot t 8AN FRANCISCO, ntercollegiate footbal tf the United State A proud possession worth traveling some fight for-—«aind one worth | king’s ransom to see? n clash with an i eleves at Pasadena uring Weil, if plans recently promulgated ven at “Lute” Nichols, graduate man-|TOUrnament of Roses in January, ager of athletics at the University| Naturally, as a University of C of California, meet with the ap-| fornia graduate, he would like to proval of the other big colleges and | the “biggest gam . are de ina universities thruout the country, | *tadium, or “bowl, Lepper ye we're apt to have a walloping|the erection of which coul cantly big game, with the American obtained, he thinks if the annaal championship at stake, played on the ar ACHE game were assured to Pacific coast next New Yeaf's day!) Berkeley. ss The Nichols argument, briefly, is| San Francisco,” says Nichols, this “would be the logical place for the) pr ioaitl enitier deciding game. Climate, population | ‘We have an annual ‘world series") 114 enthusiasm over the game din to decide the baseball championship | self—everything is here waiting for | why not football? If we could ar- Saget , range to stage a title match for the the match!” ie gridiron championship of the United| Nichols plans to “feel out™ | States at keley every year we | ther colieges and universities ob would need a stadium with a seat subject within the next. few ling capacity of 100,000 to secom- modate = slg tat GLOVE RULE. The scheme, which is only just| TO BE UI SS IN NEW YOR a-borning, contemplates the estab- lghment of a National Intercol- NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—New bo rules to govern the sport in Idgiate Football commission—com- posed of distinguished authorities on United States will be discussed day night at a meeting of the |the game—the business of which ft committee of the new Inte shall be to make a close study of | the various football teams each year | Sporting club. The committee e sists of Dr. Joseph E. R jand decide upon the semi-finalists Walter Camp, Major A. J, Biddl and tidle-match contestants. ‘The colleges and universities would Warren Barbour, George D Charles Thorley, Willlam A. play out their regular football| and Tex Rickard. schedules each autumn, save that! they would possibly begin a few weeks earlier, in order that elimina ton contests might be staged in the| ‘The French Federation of Fast, South, Middle West and Far| invited Major Bibble to attend East on Thanksgiving day or there | conferences in Paris, December 5, frame international rules. Biddle declined, however, on the grounds that America holds most of abouts. From these elimination—or semi the championships and they come over here, having an | final—games would emerge two win- | ners, who would eventually meet in| a titular match in California or some other mild climate state, on the firet day of the New Year. In case of tie gamen in the semi-| MAE MATON. NEW YORK, Nov. 3. — finals, the commission would decide | : | Stecher and “Strangler” Lewis |which teams Would play off the | ctiamelenship. tonight in Madison Square G w for what Promoter Jack orid's Series claims to be the wrestling “The idea,” says Graduate Man-| ship of the world. They will go to: ager Nichols, “is entirely embryonic|fali regardiess of time, Earl G and open to all sorts of suggestions. | dock and Wideck Zbysscko are It merely occurs to me that such a chaljenge the winner, match, with the American title at stake, would be a great thing for| Let's go bay Boldt’s French football, and seems entirely prac . Uptown, 1414 3d ave; ticable. It would stimulate interest ' town, 913 24 Ave. Promotion in the Navy comes quickly to those who qualify for higher ratings, In March 1899A. P. Nilsson enlisted in the Navy asan Apprentice Seaman, Srd class. In April 1907 he was rated Chief Turret Captain. His pay today is $165.76 per moath, mans lile-— EEL them off—“Rio”, Gibraltar, Ceylon, Yoko- hama—all the great ports of the world—are they enly places on the map to you-~or are they ports where you've gone sailing in from the high seas with every eye along the shore turned admiringly on your big ship—your ship! Are the great world ports nothing to you but little red spots in your school geography, or are they rea/ towns whose funny streets you've walked—whose strange sights you've seen—whose magnificence you've admired—towns in which you've greeted the world’s sailor men from the Seven Seas? Make each port you visit meam-another big experi- ence. Curious spots, beautiful spots, ugly spots, famous spots, and every one of them more interesting to see than anything you ever read about in all your life. Every ocean has a United States ship sailing for some port worth seeing. among men. | If you've any call in you for a full life—join, gad color all your years ahead with memories of worth seeing—with knowledge worth ha an inexhaustible fund of sea tales and adventures Picked up ashore and afloat that will make you a welcome man in any company. Compare such a personality with that of men who are content to just stick around all their days arfd see nothing. Boy! Work?—sure, andJa man’s work it is, among men, Play?—well, rather, with a bunch of men who know how to play. These comrades of yours carry in their ears the sounds of great world cities, of boom- inglguns, of swashing seas—sounds you will share with them and that will never die away. 7" And when you come home, you'll face life ashore with level eyes-——for Uncle Sam trains in se/f-reliance as well as self-respect. The Navy builds straight men -—no mollycoddles. & Enlist for two years. Excetlent opportunities for advancement. Four weeks holidays with pay Shore leave to see inland sights at ports vited. Men free. Pay begins the day you enlist. always learning. Good food and first unifc full information from your nearest recruiting station. not know where the nearest recruiting station is, ask your postmaster. He knows. Shove off !-Join the U. S.Nax Pad *

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