The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 4, 1919, Page 17

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SPORTS oa $a Coach Millikes, ef Queen and Coach Wells, of Tancon, wan call out Uhetr basketball men for the first time today, & French | Ring | | ‘Star to Box | London M an Big Fellows Go Over 20- | Round Route; Winner for Dempsey mere got the jump on ts (hin year, “The Shingleweavers HM Nave to be watehed by the other teams. They have four veterans out, with m for every position the other CARPENTIBR Don Ripley, the midwet forward of the # moa, age.26 years 1¢ mos Quays, ts the captain of the hill team eight. ..8 10% im || this season. welaht 170 pounds —- reach Joo Dyke, the big guard of the Lin. neck coin cage team two years ago, may chest not turn out for the Green Lake Il He was slated to hold ® guard Job, bet le working after school, soon to adopt « for the coming I 4 basket ba id wet TANDON, Dec. 4.—Georges Car-|under way about in i . French heavyweight, is the | Jseuary f favorite to win in the big | tonight, but the money has on his bulky opponent, Joe Odds of 5 to 4 prevailed here to- , that the British champion would Bran Morgan will coach the Broadway second team during the cage season, Young Rutledge, second baseman, will captain the Queen Anse beseball team nent year. Bin Fr captain of the Mround fight tonight in Col- | yest, Seat ve, _ Caneh r hae thy for practic stadium for a purse of $40,000/ Mecphy "** “a . the right to meet Jack Dempsey | - Ru wil! coach the Prankttn for the championship, is the biggest event in Burope since the | beginning of the war. 5,000 Fans Lese than 5,000 spectators will see the fight. Hundreds of Frenchmen, | midget basketball team again this year, Bil was one of the star tackles in the | city prop arid league Just ended. means enough money to resume oper- ations on his mining property in the| region devastated by Germany. Beckett ts not the least worrted.| He is not given much to talking, but) he did may, in his slow, heavy way:| “I shall win. Dempsey next.” Carpentier, more volatile, smiled) End | happily, and said: “I mean to win and am confident scalpers, getting $300 and $400)! shall beat Beckett. Perhaps not) Frenchmen and Americans for'very easily, but I shall beat him.” Considerable British money went on the Frenchman today. Carpen ter has always been a prime favor and fit for the best | ite in London, and some of the fans took a hunch from the statements of Eugene Corri, Eddie MeGoorty and | other notables, that Beckett would | fame} jose. The fighters will take the ring| -jadout 9:30, BY HENRY L. FARRELL United Press Correspondent NEW YORK, Dec. 4—If there Weren't so many | doping the winner of the Capentier-| Beckett Might tonight in London | would be @ simple process, London, after seeing both battlers, has made Beckett a 5 to 4 favorite. | He appeared to be tho logical win ber. In a 20round battle the olf axiom jot braing being better than brawn does not always go. Carpentier, a boxer of the scientific type, has) hown no indication of possessing the |punch to put away the rugged. heavy, bruising, gypsy fighter, Joe! Beckett. Beckett packs the well known wal- |top, and if Georges is able to dance away frem him thru half the fight until the Welshman gets tired, he has & chance to win on points. On the other hand, Beckett's rush- ing, slugging tactics may force the =| Frenchman to lay aside some of bis| selence and mix it. The Englishman) then has a chance to slip one over that may win $25,000 and the right| to fight Jack Dempsey for the world’s | championship. Eugene Corri, veteran referee; E4- | @ie McGoorty, Fred Fulton and Jimmy Wilde my that Carpentier should win. Beckett's most impres- | sive showing has been made since he | left the British air service. SHIMMIE A FACTOR IN W. VA. POLITICS PRINCETON, W. Va., Dec. 4— om your gums are core | @oughing and dieeding. yon have Pvorrhes, socalled Riggs’ Dis “tfs" to consider, | ™ tention that the beard of directors \S.&E. Squad Loses Pair of Star Men McMillian and Buck Are! V Suspended on Eve of Big Soccer Game McMillan was ordered off the ficid | during last Saturday's game against Duthies by Referee Waller for rough Play and obscene language. His sus. pension dates from last night. Somebody got their wires croased and the result was that Buck, one of the beat halfbacks on the Coast, also found himself on the suspended list. Signing. a registration form for Car bonado before he had been released | from the Duthle club was the of-| fense, The penalty is suspension for the reat of the competition, so Buck Will not be seen tn action for over a/ month, His inclusion in the league leaders’ | (Carbonado) halfback line~-their weak | point—would have balanced the whole | jteam. Manager Roberts of the Coal: | diggers will be more careful about his “dates” in the future. Carbonado squad, at the head of the table. Duthies Travel The Duthie “11” will journey to Black Diamond Sunday to engage the team of that town in a league en- gagement. With talent galore, tt is hard to account for the lowly pont tion now occupied by the Duthie ag gregation. “The breaks seem to be against us, but we'll start climbing on Sunday, and then look out for us,” is the way Bob Bonner has the situation sized up. The Duthie playern and officials will leave the Smith building at 10 o'clock Sunday morning. The trip to Biack Diamond will be made in auto- BAN JOHNSON TO CALL ON BIG HITTERS EW YORK, Dec, 4-—Ban John son's staff of legal pitchers and the heavy hitting lawyers of Col. Jacob Ruppert’s corpe were ready to go into extra innings today in supreme court. Johnson's men will put every thing they have on the ball and try to make the justice see that the league president has the right to call the annual league meeting wherever he wants it held. and the meeting called for next Tuesday in Chicago is THE meeting. With the heaviest clubs in the bat sack. Ruppert’. pinch hitters will back up their con have the supreme power of the league and that the meeting called| for next Tuesday in New York ts THE meeting. NOTRE “DAME WANTS Ss TILT SOUTH BEND, Ind. Dec. 4— When it was learned that the Oregon Aggies would cancel the Christmas day foothall game with Notre Dame, scheduled for Portland, Coach Rockne | announced negotiations would be/ opened for another Western gamé, probably at Pasadena, on Christmas day. STEALS 13 TURKEYS, ase, which is a menace to good health. We are the on'> Dentists || tm the Northwest who specialize fm this Greaded disease, Examt- mation and ertimate free Special @are taken of children’s teeth. Reasonable Giscount to Unica men and their families. 4B work guaranteed 15 years ‘The shimmie dance may be the prin- | cipal campaign issue in the annual | city election here next month. In | delivering scathing denunciation of the shimmie from his pulpit, Rev Thomas Priddy, pastor of one of the largest churches, announced that he | would interview both republican and! | democratic candidates tor mayor and | for the one who pledged himself to mie issue, it is probable that Dr Dentists INC, 8 Third Ave Cor. James St. Phone Elliott 2633 Bours 8204. m tot p ~ Sundays. 9 to 12. mie” platform. | The largest crowd tended a church service in this city turned out to hear Dr. Priddy’s ser- members of other denominations turned out that the other churches | | were almost entirely vacated. Follow the and you follow the ‘style in COLLARS Cluett. Peabody & Co, Inc, Troy. N. do his best to line up the church My og 7 | put the shimmie under the ban. | | United | In the event that neither candt-| j | date commits himself on the shim-| Priddy will put an independent can-| didate in the field on an es that ever at-! mon on the shimmie dance. So many | DROPS HIS yd LODI. Dec. 4—Tho H. L. Gray was robbed, he isn't sorry. In fact | he has something which would mean & great deal more to the robber than | his Woty. A thief stole into Gray's poultry yards and 13 young turkeys. In his hurried departure he | | ¢ropped a wallet containing $60 in currency. If Santa Claus |were really familiar with the ad- vantages of Kryptoks, he would |leave a pair in every home where |double vision glasses are needed. And {f you were as familiar with thelr advantages as we could make you, you would know what a worth while gift Kryptoks are, | With two visions invisibly combined |in one pair of Kryptoke, the wearer Jean enjoy the comforts of natural eyesight. Kryptoks have no Jine nor seam to blur the vision Ife old-style bifocals When you pase our store, step in and let us tell you about our Gift Certificate, by means of which you jean give Kryptoke for Christmas, Seattle Optical Co. Optometrists and Mfg. Opticians 715 Second Ave. Main 4334.) Est, 1690, THE SEATTLE ebatrndaien nes DECEMBER 4, 1919. Pasadena Officials to | PASADI Here for ame Western Team... "7,0" for 30 years one of Bea A, Cal, Dec, 4—With Harvard definitely|"*', ate Sent Eastern team for the N Year’s day | witi be brought home te named as the East-West football Championship game here, the committee in charge promised to name the Western team today. Western selection lies between Oregon and Washington, with | Oregon apparently the favorite. SHARKEY TO following a workout, scales at just under 117 pounds has a $1,000 forfeit will make the weight pected to go about 107. of time featured the registration pe-| riod of the present quarter, on which studentg-elect their courses | will be mailed to them At the beginning of this quarter it took the student body five days to cording to word vf daughter, Miss Louise F 02 35th ave, The| > Dr American College of member of the Arctic cl | ner club, Nile temple, t Is DEMPSEY the | to fight the winner, He | country Raymond, 4 that he| - Ontario Identify Man Who pm, Lost His Memory Looks Like a baaloesd preferably in this! cummers, ant all living in post Wilde is ex «egy . ry :. 4 U” Registration VANCOUVER, B. C., Deo, 4.—The Winter to Thieves|; man picked up recently by’the Van-| It looks like a hard winter. Thieves to Be Speeded UP) ove: police with loss of memory | are stocking up on overcoata Registration at the University of| has been identified as n0 K. Mo-| of tarmony.” Pantages will send Years ‘of ex- Washington at the beginning of the! Kinnell, of New Rochelle, N. Y. | coats st ‘Thursday are: Ole Nord pertence tm fitting Next quarter will be expedited, if the! sekinnell told the police he | tance nomas at.; W. W. Bte-| | plans worked out by Recorder Ed: thought he had been overseas with | veng “i218 Atiantc st.; John Hull and | | ward N. Stone are successful | the Canadian forces, but wasn'teure.|x7" Jo Jones, 1818 Sixth ave; Bill] To avold the confusion and waste) jie didn't know his name | Morton, James st., and A. Sound pense, enable as | | ertar 27 °. L. ¥, | erland, 1427 11th ave, Vuneral services for Mra ‘enton, who died Sunday, were held | m Honney-Wateon parlors at lock Wednesday afternoon vo | ne Chapter No. 6, Order of the | blanca | POLICE Patrolman R. C. Wa rn Both teams are training hard for| @Mroll. Other univernities register | astern Star, was in charge of the | person of M. Tayong, Sunday's battle. A victory for the | th* seme number of students in two | services. She had lived here 31 | whom he arrested at Sec locals will place them alongside the| “4)* | years, Why? The answer is “just enough Turkish” Fatima steadily outsells the straight Turkish cigarettes because in Fatima’s famous blend the heaviness of “too much Turkish” is entirely ab. sent. Even ifa man smokes more than usual, Fatimas taste right and leave him feeling right. In a word, Fatima contains neither too much nor too little, but “Just enough Turkish.” Prove it for yourself. Try smoking just enough Turkish, |Body of Sicer Will Be Brought Raymond was a fellow of the a by one brother, ARREST CHINESE found $10 worth of opium on the {EGER | Washington st. Wednesday night. Ohio Rejects Dry Law Ratification) WASHINGTON, D. C, Dee Ohio notified the state depart nt of itu rejection of the conatl _|TWO VETERAN SOCCER STARS Many old country seceer enthwust- ants now residing in the Northwest” will learn with regret of the death Burial 4 Raymond ttle’s pi tutional ea tp toch | eee prohibition amendment.|iast month of two famous foot 4 in Roch lia leaves only 36 states on the) batiers—J. B. Doig and R. Templer ym oe jfficial proclamation of the state|ton ‘These ‘ames will live In soccer” Riga hin | (ePartinent of the adoption of con-| history for all time, yt ot | etitutional prohibition, while 36) ‘rhe former wae a great goal taymond, of states are necessary keeper and for 14 seasons guarded One of the other additional states/the uprights for the Sunderland, which ratified the amendment prob-| jong, team. His age was 62 years. ably will be substituted for Ohio on| Robby Templeton was equally the proc’ mnie, | ereat an a forward, and, like Doig, | often represented Seotland in many Surgeons, « ub, the Ral he Canadian a club. the Washington 8 Art asso BY ALEX ©, ROSE Jetation, the Archaeological Sosiety ot | Suzzallo Access [international matches, Most of his On the eve of tts crucial came in| MAKE WEIGHT INTERESTED? tic Nortiwont: the Benttie Gort etun | Paying wae Gone to ee the soccer race against Carbonado at LOS ANGELES, Dec. 4-Jack|#%4 the Monday club | Educational Honor | the woowich, se = Say pexan Liberty park next Sunday, the Skin EASILY NOW Dempecy, world’s | champion, neat Dr. Raymond waa one of Seattle's! Henry Suzzallo, president of the i 2 hae 7 Ny’ he veihewer. | ner & Eddy team finds itself without! MILWAUKEE, Dec. 4.—Jack Shar-|probahly the most deeply interestea | Port known physicians, He came | University of Washington, was tn ci ee the services of its clever inside right, |, vaan in Low Aneclem today i the mut came here in 1888, following his grad: | vited Wednesday to serve as a mem- | NOCk, Scotland. Angus McMillan, who was suspended | K°Y (Will have no trouble in making | ro ot tho Neckett-Carrentier Ment, | Uation from MoGill university ber of the states’ relations divisions for one week at last night's meeting | %°, Welsh of 116 pounds for his bout vBure, Tt interentet: Demtue,| Dr. Raymond in survived by his |of the National Research council, an of the league's executive board, foie vimmny Was, bere, Gasoreey, |) SS Ca eae oMDAY | widow and daughter and two sisters, | organization composed of prominent night, it was shown today. Sharkey, | sald, and added that he was anxious! Miss Margaret Raymond and Mrs. ucators of the country. He will ac Joh Moulinette pt Let's go eat at Boldt's—uptown, | 1414 3d Ave.; sei 913 2d Ave. ton ways he 57, Chinese, cond ave, and ... and at Palm Beach : cA fact: : Here at Palm Beach—smartest, perhaps, of all winter resorts—Fatima has for two seasons held the sales-leadership formerly enjoyed by the expensive, fancy-boxed straight Turkish cigarettes, Keperntizens Sibaas A Sensible Cigarette 20 for 25 cents

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