Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PPP PRASAD IRDA RPI rene nen tetera a bate ~ nen Aes er re wee en ern rer as a surprise as Harry Wolter panncnnpoainmp: NY FRENDS TIS Tite WE GoT TOOETHER AN’ PUT TH6 KIBOSH ON "THE HIGH COST OF ¢ LININ'S WE (UST FIGHT THIS CURSE OF MADERN TIMES! put Ts re SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, NOV. 22, 1919 Your FAITH IN TE MY CITIZENS , LET ME LEAD YOu LET TE ADVISE You! DURING THE WAR You WENT \ITHO HEAT! DURING THE WAR You WENT | witdouT LIGHT: ‘YOU PEOPLE THESE FO PROFITEERS OUTA BUSINESS For Ever! my PLAN 13 S|RPLE — RE OSED TO SACRIFICES! YOU CAN PUT ALL WE've GOTTA Yo (S STOP EATING ror 3 WEEKS AND YouL L) SEE PRICES Cone DOWN— LAPP »ftar Basketball League Will Get Under Way December § PAGE 17 | Rodgers to Lead Sacramento Solons in 1920 Pennant Chase in Coast League SACRAMENTO, Nov. 22.—Bill Rodgers, Sacramento Coast league manager in 1919, was appointed to lead the Solons in 1920 here last night. had the inside track for the job. The announcement TAR PORTS | 8000 FANS EXPECTED TO SEE WASHINGTON IN ACTION THURSDAY n Teams Now Entered Cage Circuit; Season to Run for ye 3 Basketball League, subject to the * committee. i — oe of March. Pig Bout hw Looms; to Be Played Once ‘a Week by Each Team; The Schedules to Be Made Out This Week; Five More Needed for Circuit; Teams Start Practice _Application hereby apply for a franchise in The Star’s Fifteen Weeks Basket- rules and regulations of the in The Star's Winter Basketball league will get | way on December 8 . This was decided at a meeting} captains of the teams at the Y. M. C. A. last night. | teams are entered now. Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus, Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance company, Community five, and the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club. mare teams are wanted in the leacue. the city can enter by filling out the blank found mailing it to the Sporting Editor of The Star now. is no charge attached to the entry. The league is| organized for the sake of the game. a week and the schedule will run until about the! The league is made up| Piper & Taft, Un Any basket- Teams will play | Floors for the games wit be ar. | }ranged for during the coming week There will be no admission charged, jana because the league ix a munict | pal affair, efforts will be made to age the games in the high school ms. } There will be no games Guring the | = days, but play will resume imme | Here He Comes and There He Goes A wor HELPS HARLEY many as three husky tacklers han ing onto various parts of Chick's anatomy at one time, Chick doesn't seem to mind one tackler and even two sometimes fall to down him. And no matter how hard they hit him he generally comes up smiling, brushing the dirt from his face and | rearranging his headgear. He has remarkable stamina, Kd (Chief) Conner, former famous scholastic football coach, has been Beanons. I've seen him in a jot of games,” says Conner, “and I have studied him closely, for to me he is one of the greatest football players of all umes. “Harley is hard to stop because he has such a varied style of run ning and a knack of doing about everything known in the art of evad- ing tackfors. He has: “A baffling change of pace. “One of the most wonderful | straight arms I ever saw. | “A sidestep that makes nervous wrecks of opposing players meeting him in open field. DERFUL INTERFERENCE | watching Chick for the last three | ‘Bill Rumler Leads Coast | Stick Lists ‘Final Averages Published; Other Leaders Are | Crowned for 1919 SAN FRANCISCO, Noy. 22.—Rum. | |ler, outfielder of Salt Lake, with a batting average of .362, led the Pa lelfic Codst baseball league for the 1919 season, and that team, with al |percentage of 284, topped the clubs in batting. Individual and club bat | ting records and pitching records for.| the mason were made public today Of 214 hits clouted by Rumler in| 151 games, 17 were home runs, a sim. | ilar number were three-baggers and | 42 were two-muckers, Sheely, of Los Angeles-Salt Lake | was the home run king of the league, With 28 to his credit, he was only | lacking one of ticing the record of | Babe Ruth. He batted 305. He play-| ed in 168 games | Crawford, of Los Angeles, was nec | ond on the batting list, with a per-| centage of .200, in 173 games, Four-| nier, of Lom Angeles, with 11 home fTuns and 19 threo-baggers, had an| Javerage of 228 Percentage gers are: Murphy, tle, .266; Maisel, Portland, In club batting, Vernon, with | 280, was only four points bebjnd | Salt Lake. Oakland and Los “An goles, each with third place. Crandall of Los Angeles won pas games than any other twirler—28. Piercy of Sacramento, with 26 wins, | struck out 163 batters, and Dell of | Vernon was close at his heels. | With 25 victories and 162 strike: | of some other ine, Sacramento, ; Walsh, o Oakiand, Hunter, fan Francisco, |mous full eleven a Golden Bear Star ” | | “Dummy” Wells Dummy’ Wells, back of the California) Wells is said to be the haré | est hitter in in the ¢ conference. This "MAY NOT GET IN BIG GAME the fa-| «| Golden Bear | Squad Plays Tough Game California Leaves for Seat- tle After Stanford Melee Today; Title at Stake The big Game! Eighteen thousand fans are expected to throng the University field Turkey day to witness the final clash of the season here when the University of Washington warriors stack up’ against the California Golden Bears. Washington’s chances for | the Coast title are at stake in the final tilt of the year, and if they wallop the Golden Bears they may land the big game with the Eastern cham- pions on New Year's day at Pasadena, Cal. California is running up against a tough foe today when they take on the Stanford team in the South. Leave Sunday The Bear squad will leave for the North Sunday and should arrive here on Wednesday, the day before the | big game. | Coach Hunt is driving his men | hard for the big struggle and is run- | ming the team thru a series of de- | fensive formations every day. Wash- ington’s defense at Pullman is the only thing that saved the Washing- ton squad because the Staters were within the scoring zone more than once during the game, but they ‘The probable line-up of the Wash- ington and California elevens have outa, Markle, Salt Lake, equalled | been causing the dopesters to lose! couldn't force their way across the line ‘The California team has one great weakness and that is to let a single BY FRED TURBYVILLE N. BE. A. Sports Writer. j Dell's strikeout seven games record, but won) their regular night's sleep during the| ” |last few days, The biggest surprise | Jot the coast is the elimination of | !ns runs. “And the greatest of all his of- fensive tactics is a little twist of his runner drift thru their defense for In nearly every game Teams are practicing now. Tha} “Stop Harley and we'll beat ‘em. LerkeComer : ately after New Year's. | M. C. A. team wilt play © prac | That is what every western con-|own that enables him to shift with | tte tilt ith the Soldiers’ "snd ‘Balt | ference coach has told his men just/ the tackler. Ho does this in such a | Captain Fred Brooks from th Rear bead Bears bog gong besa roneinced a | ors’ club next week | previous to a game with Ohio State | way that very often there is no col- cand to lineup. Both Deeds and ais have any adres 34 poeple es ~ Wallops “Biddy” | ,, 7*, esse still wants thone other | | ince Chick Harley donned the erim-|lision at all when tackler and run- ewe She Caan Se pee ho. w « the last man to do . * five teams. The Elks are being j#on at Columbus nor meets, the tackler just elides |t9 outshine the California captain. | A: f° Sacarty ‘pak toe welioads Prize; Martin | counted on for one team Every team that has, met Ohlo| off.” B tél Yi l Pesky Sprott, said to be the great: | th 1 he! near put the ce Unless Weague is completed | has gone into the game with those| When Ohio State and Iilinoin meet a e a e jest football player ever turned out | °" 0 Fiela May Meet Him | within the next week. a junior cir-| Jorders ringing in their ears. But|today in what is expected to |by any California tear, is back at| pan Stars el | cuit of six teams will be organized. }the orders have never been exe-|be the greatest clash of the year in B t |quarter, Sprott was injured at the) W Captain Dailey and Ray The fates seem pulling There were no special rules adopt: | | cuted western conference circles Harley in bean own |start of the season and has been un-| Eckmann, two of the best open field od last night, outside of the ruling | Who can stop Harley? Well, any | again will be a marked man. That on to get into any scrimmages until | runners in the conference, the Bears a big ring battle be- that teams must register their play HARLEY'S COMBINATION team can stop him if all eleven of will be his last game as a member he past week. summy” Wells, the | had better watch their step Turkey /Ohio State Takes On Illinois | Susae leonctine. ee te day or Washington will be walking eer eB ERR SESS RE SERS | ers a week before the start of the . . - the men will tackle him at once.|of the Ohio State team. Barring is two soldier heavy- | season, and must limit their men to , AND STIFF ARM But generally Harley's ten team-| possible injuries that may incapa- Oth |is conceded that position. off with the game. For while Bob 10. SHAKES OFF MANY TACK) mates keep at least ten of the other | clate him, Chick will be at bis best in er Big Grid Game | “on the tine the only change is that|. Hundreds of old grads are expect- of Akron, is con- | No men may be traded or added | LI | fellows pretty busy. I've seen as|that day, Can Illinois stop him? — lof Englebretson at end. Englebretson | ed to root for Washington Thurs en his knockout | **r_ the seventh game. c nee ss MRC TNT 9 on sae BY HENRY L. FARRELL | is said to be of the fast, shifty type.| day in a mighty effort to stem the Ut =| Schedules will be mado out this| ! (United Press Staff Correspondent)|The battle between him and Ted | California tide. Sergeant Martin | weex BOSTON, Nov. 22—Cultured old | Faulk will be worth the price of ad-| It’s going to be a great day and | mission alone. Washington's chances for the west- They will include ona game| | & week for each team. cary 3 || They Don’t Pull is doing likewise. Boston grinned teday with a “before Dern Other announcements of the ° ve - ~ rn title are hanging in the balance, ee Poe \teague will be made dally in The } This Football sees ie wi eS aR trus| but the Purple and Gold won't lack ‘ week en, | Star. Feat Nowadays eo & of the old town fairly support, at least not after they burst with the mobs, crowds and fect the other day "| gangs of football enthusiasts that be- | gan pouring in on special trains at! daybreak, The stage was set with all the trimmings of old Harvard-Yale bat ties that were halted after 1916 for stepped on Pullman. Cincignati, scaling 200 | Between the halves at W Point a cadet was descanting etperience of his 20 years. “Shucks,” bh said, when someone mention: ed quarter backs. “You all a7 Dibn. LeollLassen. THE BIG GAME! While championships in foot- Big League Football-Is and knocked out y Burke, a former na- amateur champion, | Pitchers fear Rath, but the slabster | whe states that he likes to piteh | ngninet the Detroit club is too brave gke es6°soS ie * é ball are nice things to brag nevah saw Curry of Vander- ® soul to linger long on this costly | the bigger battle in France. the tenth round of a bilt, 1 reek sell, . avons whe cum gain. the least | Pertect weath vated. Har. about, and cups and such look reckon. Jota of pleasure facing Hellman, tect weather preva ar 20-round bout. N Pl d| } “You mean Curry who was || Flagstead, Veach and Cobb certainly | Vard was favorite to win, Odds of Bri ow ANMNEA | nitty adorning the particuiar | Killed In France?” hase stunted sense of hamer. 8 to 10 Were offered O’Brien aa school with which you happen “Yes, Rabbit Curry. Great- se ~ a —— | ope coma the other day. He's a middle. a ashort count in the ; to be or have been associated est quarterback of the South, Cactus Cravath, of the Phillies, i] CHICAGO, Nov. 22.—The Ohio-| weight, weight and only 19 years old. : 1 eveland Tigers Sta ea} « on Bill Pertica, the Angels’ youth- round with a left ts ‘with, It’s the big game of the Used to catch kits Teg the | Tilinols battle for the championship poomgeg et th zee i —_—— 2 and would have fin- With Teams Wanted sods tat inant dead run and hold ‘em, too.” *|of the big 10 at Columbus held the| °™ ppg bons, Gt Pest light heavywelshie: mesta : him earlier but for F Big Citi ala tated, ree Tou don't ste imnih of that " stage today in western football con-| pom Woodhouse, local heavyweight, | Mick King of Seattle In a 15-round go at Dd holding rom big Cities ei toe ‘ae Sanne stak nowadays. No play of the |) pra tests boxes Marry Gillum, Salt Lake miller, | Calgary, Canada, on Thanksgiving day. tactics of the ee : A < —_— wat me game carries n greater thrill. notre va Ohio will enter the game without |at Aberdeen on 26 in a ax: | Gibbons ts billed’ to mest Prank Farmer ti giant. CLEVELAND, Nov. 22—A big} 1” = coord bd . ; air Walter Eckersall could do it timing in the Northwestern and W A defeat this season. Illinole suffer. | Found, we. ie inna ee at, ® the tenth round Vindoe in pee tooten tein the) Se gmap nie and —pick the ball out of the air fn leagues, bas petitioned Wade Killifer|ed one setback at the hands of the|aiso of this h , in the semi-windup. Jack Britton, world's welter king. j > anda fo big}: Yio. vores, han all the like a baseball player. So ||" * 2°? Badgers, but if the Illinois come off | “Kea” Calhoun, a ising At has turned down an offer ay ord makin Propaganda for said big from Clay hit the rosin PaKIne: in launched here when| filles in the world, and so it te could Charles De Saulles. | no ght-handed piten-| Victorious they will have a logiti.|middiewelght, meets Ed Maul of ¢ Hite to battle here because business —-j Mees, Referee | Movccentatives of the fival Tigers| Wit every scheel Each school | | er, cla ie vin the waiver |mate claim to the championship Harbor in ous of the other bouts on the| is too good in the East new, Soreness “o “| has at least one heriditary en- row with the Gian — ans then stepped | or Massillon and Cleveland met and| (my. * | we @ him to. thes Stallings ee Frankie Haynie, « welter, who was stopped the [planned to play @ rubber game to) Today in Seattle we have such | P/E MPSEY AND |, Frank Parmer. the Tacome losrer: Jt] making & big hit in Kan Franciaco, ts on ~ - . ad ‘ | |® busy bird these day ‘e he down grade. He was knocked fo: 4 ther. The victory | settle the supremacy of the two! case wien Lincoln plays pparently bh 'Washin ton Boy MeCormick at Milwaukie, Ore., In @| goal in Los Angeles by Bteve Dalton the r) teams, each of which has trimmed| pproad: hi it’ ae . that “Eene” Pinelll 10-round go on November McCor-| Sther night. e's §=seventh | the other 3 to 0 this season. enewey: in thinness. Ie WAR BR |e wu ot aoe tee 1a te iatok te the Austrelian battler, holder of Ki prep school football, but never- the Lord Lonedale belt. Sam Relkin is now in charge of Clay tht in New Orleans | me ; raat 4 coveted circle the This deciding contest will be! theless it’s the big game. Old OUT TALENT - — Hite t See ae ce rue |played at Cleveland Thankseiving| grads of both schools are look- ‘The proposed third major league In a rew ua Hilly Wright, Seattle welterweight, | returned’ from Wenatches. Share a eat is 7 en hee. where he has ‘a | afternoon. ing up the dope on the two | Maybe it's the war or maybe it is|chimera Ruppert, Frazee and Comisky, woste Gentty Wiliams, © colored bey [been boxing apples. Sam didn’t say tt And the backers of both clubs| teams and there promises to be | Jack Dempsey's defeat of Jess Wit) {Them Sues Ant "teenie ina, anh Starts Work from Porilandy An he sema-windup on | wietior they uae the Marguls of Queens 4 Ss WHERE |agreed to get busy on the forma-| general locking up of desks in lard that is responsible for the pep |r uly do not entertain any ideas of a 4 go. “ rh tion of the big league of the grid- offices holding former Lincoln h 4 the heavy: 2” organisati on Washington's shatices ‘fee a..wit- dviinns | " aie ace Wet aes to te . elgh saa ‘ae es rooklyn has hopes of landing Fran pason | yards, takes on Jimmy Clarke, the Ca- | Chicago and New York are to t It's the big game of the year, |Welshts these days, Anyhow there} a ivacr of the Giants, Snyder was with |took a turn for the better, following | nadian veteran, who put up a swell fight | d Invited to join the Ohio big fo and while the city championship | 1s more hope among the white hopes |the Cardinsis before he landed with Mc- | the initial turnout held last week at| With Mike Peto here @ short time axo, | MADE BALKS the Calitorsin-Washing.|" Pro football—Cleveland, Canton.) js at stake, It doesn’t make | today than there ever was. The old| hind ine plate UAMe 8" | ine crew house, Twelve letter men|tonight owt St Vancouver Be Guy v4 an'n®\ stocwition and Akron. Possibly the| much difference, because the i | sited . sone 1 Bis be hed at the follow-|} 1 ogi ge arsine linc | 5 lterm of “white hope’ originated in| -—— are in college and eligible for the — ATIONAI a league ane? wn meysene gr le | game would mean just as much |i. Give when fight promoters were | varsity eight Harry Casey, Seattle lightweight, 4 & Hulen’s ii. tania -and Deve Mannet. + se if some other team in the |v oouring the country in a vain BI JTI ER MAY The 1918 eight, which defeated | mosts Stonley Willie of Portland om the In the National league only 17 tnd Taft's TR ee ieee) ee the heners. y. | searth of a big white man who could Stanford and California on the Oak- | Ml ™sukee card next wee pitchers were penalized for balking Spalding and Pron ifter » thoro canvass ol | ‘The Big Game! It's the el | 5. in and recapture the heavyweight | NOT PLAY IN land estuary last spring, responded| yroya Madden tackles Young |CUrms the season. Of. these but the game look in these cities wh pro foot-| max of the football season, It's | fi)" 100 Ten eT nnaon, A. new /to the call. Charles Logg is out for Lloyd, Madden tackles Youns jtwo made more than one balk. fF the California section| ball now has a Food footing. ana} {he same that the players have | wiits hope sprung up as readily as| CAL BATTLE the football eleven and will not be son Turkey day. Elmer Jacobs had three balks called at Piper & Taft. Tw Backers of bot J lev sone red been turning gut in clear and | pi Hanwey clews but “many were 1° lable to take his place as stroke until « - on him and Osear Tuero two. the have heck ohtninea| Massillon Tigers are enthusiastic! cloudy weather for, night after | cota hut’ few chown.” if the tay Butler, Washington's most | spring. Capt. Tony Brandenthaler | ,,.S4™™¥, Good. | form A bulk was called on Fred Toney, Miaté Manager Darwih Meis.|over the proposition. night for weeks. What a big | wiite hope search wax on today the | consistent ground gainer this season, | will not he able to take his place ax igh gen Mr A of the Giants, which cheated Max lake care of the ticket pur i institution one game of foot v7 leearchers would not be faint-heart-}may be out of the big fracas with | stroke until spring, on account of in-| cisco. He ¥ Carey out of a stolen base. at tie game, ‘This wit do| FLYNN WILL MEE can become yr bape — ; ed. Resides Rob Martin, the sensa-|California on Turkey day, because of | juries received on the gridiron. box in the near fn 1, Mas tole a. bade cleanly, an Sa eg ORE Niner, which have KEELER AT POOL, ™™"" to the life of our schools. | tional knockout king of the inter-|® broken rib. Against Whitman,| The winter turnouts have been! sao yemitn, Salt Lake heavyweight, |thought, in a game at the Polo Whack of every other big <tr nl le | allied armies, there is Martin Burke, | Butler baa one of his ibe broke | held in order to give the then start |who ranked as ono of the best middle: | grounds on August 24, but the next j | Jim Fiynn, the Pueblo fireman the soldier heavyweight, who has| While attempting an end run ne |towards training, California and | weights in the country a few years ago,| day Umpire Qu @eciared that — 7 Sta 7 y planning on comin; Y ne a: — - WOMAN BOOKMAKER been trimming them regularly down |b was re-broken at Pullman last | Stanford have the edge gn Washing: | '% Planning on i \ne had called a balk on Toney and | will make his first bow to & | a long layoff RD wing fore (eetieeny Toe See 1S FINED IN LONDON) in New orteans. Both these |Saturday, altho the gritty half back |ton for weather, Taking advantage | tes working out dow the scorers were compelled to cor- ETEORS TO Crystal Pool, when he takes on fer has 2 lyoung giants are going big played the entire game, Coach Hunt|of this, their aspirants for aquatic day, He may be used to meet| rect their sheets. Y BREMERTON M Willie Keeler, the K. rtist, in a! LONDON, gtr mug ge ahes right now, ‘There algo are others on|!# taking no chances in letting his} honors get out early every fall, ‘The et ae ee eer eee TEAM | cmoker to be staged oh the Bike The |ley was fined $100 or, tn data ‘lthe flstic map, but if Burke and|#tar half get into the scrimmage |present training season will Inst |‘ om the» my Sereres om ee, ee MES crack team of Meteors,| proceed will be turned over to the |49 days’ imprisonment at the Man- | sarin Keep polishing them oft|With the sofubs until the injured |about two weeks. ‘The regular turn gies” ‘Woeba; & ‘Gan Mremetesd RATTLE OF THE CAN Ing club football teams | Seattle Boys’ home. | chester pout ‘e My om ere Dempsey will have a “worthy op-|member can stand the strain, out is set for February 1. is another new boy in town. Truck Hannah, who came up to tary will tackle the Bremer. | Four other bouts will be on the |b nee ps. ; ee A \ atts *| ponent some of these days. Ray Eckmann, the midget of the} Instead of the annual triangular| Woods fought » draw the New York Yankees with consid- Fatd squad at Vremerton|card. The fans are anxious to see|fined $25 for alding and abetting. | Bacarssadi bie 3 ain tl Washington squad, is holding down | regatta, dual races will feature this| Daltom erable flourish, is on the market. Wing day. Karl Pike, for-|big Keeler, who has been knocking |The prosecutor stated thmt children ‘ Butler's pl Eckmann‘s showing | year. Under a new agreement, Call! tting orn Manager Miller Huggins has con- Cea Har, is holding down lout his opponents in punch lately, some of them under 15 years of| ‘The mighty Casey Is the star of| the last few nights may cause Coach |fornia and Stanford will come North | Billy Wright. cluded he will not do, Another case fie ends: Ben Corada, who, in action against Flynn, to get lineage, were ween to hand betting slips) the Harvard team, Now if he doesn't /Hunt to give him a chance to show /to meet the varsity on Lake Wash- | — of a little man beating out a big PRA seasons with Whit-|on how good he really fx. ‘The C | f0 the woman 1 court flayed do something like Mighty Casey of /against the Bears, He has proved|ington. ‘The Bears are scheduled to| Jee Curtis, who fy working out under! man as catcher on & major league os tackle. ‘The incal boys}tal Pool was donated by Austin &| Mise Gor for encouraging chill- | baseball fame, maybe there will be|to be the best open field runner on! be here in April, with Stanford a | Comer according. to Lonmie Awsting who | WUD, for Muddy Ruel has won out * er the wtate title, Salt. dren to bet. no upset, the Purple and Gold team this year. month later, saw him work out with Joo Welch in Ta-' over Hannah, QO SBS8 UB THE SPORTING GOODS