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WELL 2 At GONNA GET MHY YOu Pook SimP HE DOESNT NEED IT NOW, HE CAN WALK: bE 5 NIX ON THAT LOVE CHATTER, YOURE FULL OF Hor aie! Two Hirt A CARRIAGE!) ‘YEARS AGO YOU PROMUSD dining poe wo To GET TW ) BABY A, CARRIAGE AH! tty LoVE OH Boy! NOW FoR tty Daily BATTLE WITH TH WIFF! a Ones P repLineups Basketball Application STAR LINCOLN FORWAR New League Is Blasted by Sudden End of Flareup in Baseball World Se | We hereby apply for a franchise in ‘The Star’s Basket- © Be out for the cage team again this EVERYBODY PLAY! That's the big movement of sport thruout the country today There always will bo first teams at schools and colleges and on playfields and in clubs, but the big “everybody play” move ment is gaining ground thruout the country. The movement started in the Kast at the conclusion of the war, when it was evident that the playfielis of America had won the world conflic In Seattle the ¥. M. C, A. and the hich schools are foster dug the movement, The “Y" has started extension © bureaus tm the various sections of the ‘eity and hope soon to have bu- Teaus on every playfield of the These bureaus establish play enters, wh organize soccer leagues, Nand ether play- Field sports, giving every boy of the dist a chance to play and a@ chance develop. Up at Broadway high school, Sherry Berthisume, physical di- Feetor, bas organized a class basketball leac and beys who Mever even went to see a basket. game before are now play img gume and living and talking basketball. ‘The same with indoor baseball. A Keague in which over 100 boys feok part has just been completed a@t the First bill school. And San a socetr league will be start. ‘ed. with the games being played at Lincotn playfield. There sre many boys who Bren't quite good enough players fo make the first or even second teams in schoots, but the “every. play” pion gives them all a chance. First teams th schools are ab. selutely essential, just as muei: | as the everybody play plan, be. cause the rivalry between schools fy the backbene of school spirit. But the sooner the new plan is Adopted in local schools and on ity playfields, the more good “Mtleties will do the coming citi Bens and our city. | | for Big Game Still Riddle Whether Hallet Plays Makes Big Difference in Lin- coln Team Lincoln's lineup for the coming title struggle with Broadway is stl keeping the prep school grid far awake nights, Whe ‘Toughey” Hallet plays makes a bi difference in the way the north end crew will take the field, With Hal let out, Captain Walter Jute will ™ ely be found at half, with K at tackle, Jule's regular place, But with Jule in the line, Rathbun will hold down one of the end jobs The rest of the Lincoln squad is expected to take the field the same as in the other games, Hd Head ther or not “wall is elated for one of the end jot Jand John Farley will hold Bill Savage This is Bill Savage, brother of Tony Savage, former “U” | grid and basketball star, who is holding down a guard job for Lincoln in the big Broadway-Lincoln game Saturday. | Bill is one of the best linemen in the city and is also a! | star at the cage game. He is captain of the Lincoln basket- | ball squad this season. | Baird Shades Dundee at B. P.0.E. Show; Keeler Wins Before » Bout | Gets Started ———= a, [=> Little Seattle Miller Puts Up Great Battle With Dun- | Neer's Tigers finished ont Marre front in the gym indour baseball at the is week. The nie made up of Jack Arnold tenio 13, seniors, 6 Coach Reseherg « for basketball pract the Thankegiving va AN tesue the first cat Jimmy Marquis, B: Rot return to Br: Me graduates in F y pitcher, witt In the spring. Sherry Berthiaume, Broadway gym director, is planning a soccer league for Broadway clase teams, whieh will get under way at the end of the football season. Bilt Graham, Broadway veteran, wil and will captain the ball squad next season. whe is playing feotball squad, is m California prodact, and will be ent for the half-mile on the North y track squad next year, The “Mi-Y,” tion. will mee! team next Tui nigh school organiza. select an all-city grid ay night at the “Y Ballard ana ide the cellar tt at the ball park. & Kame this year. for 3:30. Seattle meet to de the prep league Neither team has won The kick-off is set m@ WATER SHARKS Wil perform up at the Y. me C. A, Swimming Club demonstration held Friday and Saturday, November 28th and 29th : 8 Exhibition of strokes, stunts, fancy diving and water baseball will be the features. The Friday program starts at § p. m. and the Saturday program at 11:30 a. m. PPiper < Toft Inc 1109 SECOND AVE, ; THE SPORTING GOODS STORE n wi x Your Patronage Appreciated lay Checks Cashed TORREY & SEARS’ BILLIARD PARLOR 1420 3rd, Corned 3rd and Pike Luneh Ce Barbe: Foustale Brin mn 1 iG THIS AD any American ther ad $2 Ronde ELEY CO, 9g) 9| floored Larue twice in the last round, dee; Keeler Does a “Babe Ruth” in First Inning; Etcel Draws Jones BY LEO H. LASSEN i With the glass in his left lamp badly cracked, Earl Baird, | the little local feather, shaded Jimmy Dundee, the California! champion, at the Elks’ club’s first show last night before a/ crowd that packed the place to the roof, literally speaking. The Elks have had some new seats installed in their band- box gym and while perhaps a few more people may be seated, the whole gang had a hard time keeping their knees | jout of the fellow’s neck directly in front of him, and keeping ithe fellow’s knees behind you out of your own neck was {no easy job. Outside of the bouts the seating came in for} |the most attention, | But back again to the main subject. For three rounds the little fellows danced. around and a lot of time was wasted | while Baird waited for Dundee to come to him. But in the jfourth round Baird went out to get the visitor and he got ‘him. The fourth was Earl’s big round and he used his |right well, making Dundee back up in a toe-to-toe slugging |bée. Dundee’s smile left his face and the battle was on| in earnest. | Baird also had a shade in the fifth round by | hand. good une of his right Dundee whipped home a lot of points with bis left, but Baird countered with his starboard mitt and had a shade before the round was jover, In this session the little fellows collided and both were cut over the eye, but Baird got the worst of it and his bad eye bothered him tn |the final session when Dundee came back and won a heavy shade over |the Seattle boy. Dundee used his portside glove in the round well and was making Baird miss badly when the bell rang. It was a good battle| and a good draw. One judge voted draw and another Baird, and Referee |Schacht called it ev |KEELER BOUNCES WOODHOUSE ON CHIN | Willie Keeler, the big heavyweight from the shipyards, must have had an early date last night, or something, because he went at his work right off the bat and broke up the semi-windup when he “Babe-Ruthea” Tom Woodhouse on the molars for the long count in the first round. Keeler is running up quite a record as a homerun hitter, altho™we never gets a chance to hit more than one per game. In ba when the apple is knocked over the wall they bring out -another ball, but & boxer has only one chin The fans didn't have a chance to see any of Keeler’s footwork last |night because with his long reach he could have sat in a chair and |knocked Thomas for the circuit. The former 8, A. C. boxer took the count for the first time in 60 bouts last night. Keeler towered over | Woodhouse and a lot of fans thought that the shipyard mauler was a little big lor Woodhouse But anyway, the fans are now talking about a bout between Keeler jand Frank Farmer, the Northwest champion. If Keeler can take ‘em on the chin like he can hand ‘em out, we may have a champion there yet |ETCEL DRAWS JONES | the little fleet boxer, got off to a bum start in his bout with Morgan Jones, the Tacoma boy, when he was caught off balance with a right hand cross and flopped on the floor for a short count, but he came back and after losing the first two rounds he | fought Jones all over the ring in the fourth, which he won by a wide margin, and shaded the Tacoma boy in the third. It was a good bout Jones used his left hand well in the early going, but tired in the last |two rounds and Etcel finished stroager. George Etcel, Ed Spaw! won over Les Haynes in the second bout on the card |was too big for Haynes and won by use of his long reach showed he a game kid, but it wasn't a very good exhibition Johnny fellow who started against Frankie Rogers at th er, was put with Lightweight |Eddie Papke, of the fleet, when “Red” Gage filvvered out for some| |reason or other. AfcFariand quit in the first round when he took one| jon the chin. He knows absolutely nothing about the art of defense and should take a few boxing lessons before #tarting again, because some one | |is very likely to wreck him if he doesn't. Nate Druximan gave his hove to charity Spaw! Haynes on J, was the Elks’ first show of the year and was run off well things can be improved upon, however. One is the bell, which tinkles real cutely, but which can’t he heard without an earphone, and the other is that there isn't enough room Just outside of the ropes. Every time the boxers ran into the ropes they ran into somebody's shins There should be some way of making room for seconds and the water | ets and chairs | Two HOW “GOOD” THIS “FAT”|SYRACUS |LARUE PERSON MUST BE| FORBATTLES IN WEST OAKLAND, Cal, Nov. 20.—"Gun- SYRACUSE, Y., Nov. 20.—The boat” Smith won easily from Bill Lar | Syracuse football “11” will leave for rue last night in the main event at|the West tonight, confident of vic the Auditorium here. “Gunner” tory in the battles with the Indiana university team at Bloomington, once for the count of six and again|{nd., Saturday and the University of E TEAM IS OFF down the other providing that Rathbun plays tackle, Anderson and Bird will play the guards, with either Jute Pitwood or Rathbun and Pitwood playing the tackles Phil Glenn will be at Dean Boyle will call and center and the signals ball League, subject to the rules and regulations of the members’ committee. Team or firm Manager, or captain... MEMPHIS RING MAN TO OFFER $12,000 FOR GO MEMPI ‘Tenn, Billy local boxing today 4 & $12,000 purse for a bout Jimmy Wilde and Pal tn Januory Moore has al dy 4 the offer and n k is walting word from the English champion, promoter between Moore, her Matthews in doped for one half and Bi Wilkens for fullback Coach Turner, at Broadway, is running his men hard during the toning He is perfecting sev eral open play formations whi: being bs The Br stationary y¥ line-up tn far from There are several jobs up in the alr, Backer, Hagen and Peterson are staging a three-cor nored fight for the pivet job, The final line-up will not be given out mul Saturday, the day of the big tlt /CANNEFAX WINS BIG BILLIARD TOURNEY CLEVELAND, Ohio, Ni Bob of New York held ushion billiard champion the nament Cannefax the three He finished here last night wi 4 one lost. Char Cleveland, hin ship ight gamen won * MeCourt of nearest competitor dropped his game yesterday and fin ished with seven won and two lest HINKLE HOPES TO LAND WILDE BOUT CLEVELAND, 0., Nov Matt fight prom today had received a telephone call manager of Jimmy Wilde, English flyweight champion, asking for terms for Wilde's first American bout here. Hinkle did not say wheth- er he made an offer but stated he hoped to land the show linkle al ter BY FRED TURBYVIL) N. EB. A. Sports Writer, A war ended card a gun fired nor smelled the wmoke of burned powder. It was a ver war, minus bloodshed and conducted at a minimum of cost has just No one gentle and dam) The 1 oing the usual rela as regards drafts, optional de And three months ago one of the ads in baweball vhat he termed “a war He aid the minors were ready to fight it out and that this fall would see the hot tent warfare between majors and minors in the history of the game to resume and wisest h oldest to The minors were ready to go it lone and the majors had their plans | starte | need for such With the war over before it got there probably will be no 4 league. There are of minor clubs that used an for major players plenty be league can farms And #0, and providing the Ban John Ruppert Frazee Comiskey forces do not get too serious in their fuss, the baseball map will remain pretty much the same next year And everybody is happ: War is h 1 whether the ammunition is aseba dollars, or bullets and REGAN MAY PURCHASE WESTERN LEAGUE TEAM X CITY, Iowa, Nov, 20—Pat big league pitcher, last year, with the Giants, may become owner of the Omaha Western League club year. Rumors are current to effect that a stock company with n at its head, will purchase the w» from Owner “Bill” Rourke. It is understood that Rourke has been anxious to sell for several years, Ragan is now a free agent, having been released by the Giants e let's go eat at Roldt's—uptown, 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 24 Ave. made, too. Major ready le magnates big minor p | ne as a farm for the development tt young players, I talked with base ball men who had been approached n the subject of th being ned up as head of the new league At various times during the world nerion was in conference with well known stars and managers who | he had in mind to head various| | clubs. “rue planned a xt one ...and at Atlantic City cA fact: At Atlantic City, which affords a cross-section of American society, is one of the three best sellers in nearly every hotel on the famous boardwalk. At many of them, indeed, including the Marlborough-Blenheim, the Traymore, and Haddon Hall, Fatima is steadily the leader. Kg itysreSibaan 2, FATIMA Sensible Cigarette 20 jor 25 cents for the count of eight, the gong say ing Larue from a knockout, s ” Nebraska “11” at Lincoln, Neb. on Thanksgiving day, ‘ i The “Just-enough Turkish” blend Leadership facts such as these offer interesting proof both of Fatima’s pleasing taste and of the fact that they can be smoked freely without worry about “too many.” Three words explain it: “Just enough Turkish.” Not too much Turkish, as in over-rich straight Turkish ciga- pee) a too pote taste, as in lends less skilfull ropor- tioned; but just enough. Tur ish to suit the American smoker nearly everywhere,