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BUD RIDLEY BEATS - MORGAN JONES IN. SIX ROUND NO- DECISION BOUT Joe Waterman, Bud Ridley @f a decision for his little batt — Jones, Tacor m nade 128 - stepped on the Minutes before the fight, he Weighed 15114 He didn’t Bhow up for the weighing in Pat 5 p.m. Bud weighed 12444 pound " Waterman wouldnt let Ridley box less the go was called a draw if Doth mon were on their feet. PAfter Promoter hanklin had fome small town stuff by Geking the boys present to stand up aa vote on whether he should put VRidiey on and have a no-decision Or whether he should sudsti gome one, which would have Bart Baird, the fans voted for iy and the bout was on Weill, Ridley fought last night as have heard that he coukl fight as in and out and on top of y all the time Bud's punches the more steam. Jones his long left hand tem tn his ing, but there was no doubt What Jones would have lost for first time if a decision had been scales a few il punches to the wind both the Tacoma boy considerably coulir’t’ make any “impres- on the Seattle boy at all, as @ confined his work to boxing alto using his. longer reach to tage. ‘The first round was falrty even. Jones having a slight edge, if The boys Telit éatn’ otiier out @idn't warm up to the bout very doxers hit wp a stiffer clip gecond round. Ridley opened ing Jones with a couple of tienes 6a the chin. Then Jones 4 jabbing with his left and he ‘piled up a big lead on points the final seconds of the round. Ridley dropped for no count @ perfect right on the chin. The rang just as Jones got to his third round was even, with Doys landing effectively. Jones} Spt using his left well, while Rid ‘Goncentrated his attack on Jones fourth round was Ridicy’s by He started swinging his faster and he caught Jones and time again on the chin with pPight and he was using a left to the wind with effect . fifth round was rather listlens, h of the millers saving up sixth round. The fifth was session. last round went to Ridley. He all the fighting in this ses At one time they stood toe to Jones had to back up after sevetal stiff punches in the | Martin didn't get any the best in the, semiwindup when . 4 siow, uninteresting bout It have been a draw. Fisher, an army fighter from , Wash., claiming the mid: sht championship of the army a draw with Clem Zukowsky, light-heayweight. Fisher had altho he was. outweighed il pounds. He used a hard Uppercut with effect and miss. 1 swings that would have achorse if he had landed. Hannon, Seattle feather. fooled the wise boys) by a draw with Mike De the clever oma kid If Mickey had the edge, as js@rowd booed the decision long Joud. Mickey. had Mike hang- on-time and time again. De didn’t look like he was in of ‘condition. the opening bout, Ray Tem- | & big beginner, put up a wild with Bob Allen, Brenierton Tempie threw his punches i and managed to knock down a couple of times. Tem- ‘was so green that he tried to Alien a couple of times when was on his knees, succeeding but the referee didn't call the Allen was given the verdict It was announced from the ring Tiny Herman, Tacoma heavy- will box Lee Anderson, San colored miller, who won t over Sam Langford and ‘ Keller in Portland recently, two weeks. ‘The most for your . the best for mouth, the r BURGLARS Merry Harvest Is Still Going On ERE IS YOUR MONEY? Get Peace of Mind and 4% By Depositing It at THE BANK FOR SAVINGS Pine St, at Fourth Ave. s lightweight boxer, w pounds for Bud at 5 p. m., but when he} AND FRANKLIN manager, talked himself out ler last night over in Tacoma. supposed to BASEBALL | MAGNATES TO MEET CHICAGO, Nov “Fate of organ. ined baseball be decided at | will a BROADWAY CLASH bens a sadway and Franklin were cunsathea's stage their annual Jiron strugsle at the Beattle rai cage ball park this p, Th game ts expected to have « big bear ng on the championship the ower will have a hard time keeping ° an n step with the gue leading series of meetings of major league | One ain magnates beginning tomotrow with| 4. \icort this afternoon was set the assembling here of National | go. 5.90, league club owners, The dope places the chances at Monday both National and Amert.| 5060 for both teams, Franklin has been considerably strengthened by can league magnates will meet sepa | ee ei ene Cole and ‘Taylor rately. three veterans who were ineligible | Faced with the continued defiance | the first quarter, Corbett, another of five American league club own. | new man, is ineligible, because he agat mao Lasher bi q.| ves outside the Franklin distrtet bere sae. stellt eile Tomorrow afternoon Lincoln, and tng fer yeorgantmtion of . bape Queen Anne will put on their ar the national leaguers and owners of| nual tiff, The game is another tm the three insurgent American league | portant gne as t teams have lost teams are expected to prepare ato Ballard and the losing team w joounter proposition to thé one pro Ve counted out of the pr nea, posed by the American league son's race. NEW YORK, Nov, §.—The prodi gal of the football world has re |turned to the gridiron fold. ™ other words, Fordham untver aity te back among those present in the pigskin-chasing sport, after hav ing been owt of the game since 1917. | And Fordham’s “comeback” which rival for the strong teanm listed in lithe Fordham in build and has had | perte: _ THE PRODIGAL GRID TEAM RETURNS mainstays around) built a dangerous Kearns are DuMoe ha sebedule, fullback, fs a giant heap of «x tn Ane AMOR, Noonan, at halfback, was a mem Halloran, at start-| ber of the freshman team at North ed off with a large bang in the firet| western university Inst year and bas of experience. At halft |New York Aggies were the goose emg end of a Tl to 0 scorn jwhat Coach Joe DuMoe’s squad of | players looks ke They are a fine arts of the autumn pastime in | {spite ae guard before, DuMoe ts sort of on trial as « coach. prominent member of the All-Amer fean lineups, due to his playing at Fordham and Lafayette during the past four years. | ©. Hallosan, Jerry Noonan and B. game on this season's schedule. The| had ph on the F That gives a pretty good Mea of | piace He has never tried the in-| is structing art before, tho he was a! played on the same position he is holding this season outfit, are ,maying y Kearns, ok, was halfback ute and won @ holastic on ar lineup of New Jersey last reason. The Fordham tine ts questionable. husky crew and have mastered the| Not as to punch and speed, but a» to who will f the fact that only one mem-| tions. the team hag ever worn|to pick from. Fordham football trousers and nose-| sure to be a land the regular pe DuMoe has a lot of mate tar is Walsh, who, be fore the war, was a member of the Fordham prep eleven. Fitzpatrick the gnly Fordham veteran. He the 1917 equad at id Veterans, who have eeen DuMoes “Watch Ford bam PULLMAN, Wash, Nov. 5-— Nothing short of a trip to Pasadena, Cal, for the annual New Year East vs, West contest will satisfy the/ Washington State College football team this year. Idaho and Montana have niready fallen to the farmers by scores of 14 to 7 and 31 to 0, re| spectively, The Cougars play the Untversity | of California in its big game of the) year at Berkeley, Cal, Saturday. Altho depending to @ great extent on aerial science, the Cougars boast} of a line lke the proverbial “stone| STANFORD COACH WAS GRID STAR Walt Powell, coach of the Stan ford team, which meets the Sun} Dodgers next Saturday at’ Denny | field, was a former Wisconsin star and Jater coach of the Western Re/ serve university eleven at Cleveland. | Powell, who comes from Reeds | Wis, .was allWentern center on the last conference championship team the University of Wisconsin boasted. He is giving the Coast conference a “Big Ten” brand of football | which was taught him by “Big John’ Richards and “Germany” Schultz and with which he succeeded in giv. | ing Western Reserve crack teams up to the time he was called into| the army as athletic director. NEW YORK, Nov. 6. — Coach “Buck” O'Neill has relegated Kien. | ninger, captain of the Columbia un versity squad, to the second team since the Wesleyan defeat, High Class Dentistry At most reasonable prices. Extraction absolutely with- out pain or bad after ef- fects. All work guaranteed 15 years. Take care of your health. X-RAY FREE 9 to 10:30 A. M, United Painless Dentists Phone Elliott 3633 Third and James Street. | MOANS AND groans, | cee 1 SAID “The wind.” oe. COUGARS WANT THAT PASADENA GAME wall.” Elde Jenne, Otympte games athlete, has starred in each precon- ference game with his consistent toe | work, booting the ball for an aversge of well over 60 yards. The “crim | cross” play has also figured largely io the Washington State strategy. The entire backfield ls composed of veterans of the team who proved such strong contenders for the 1919 conference title, Roy, Handley at right end is “getting down under” the aerial passes for long gains: Mike Moran ts back at balf with Jenne at the other side of Floyd Gillis, veteran fullback. Fred Ham litem, star of last year’s squad and captain of the team, is back at left) tackie. MILDMAN CIGARS MANE IN SEATTLE SOLD EVERYWHERE LAST MONTH, on a bet. 8's WITH THE bors up hom ° 1 SPENT a night, eee ALONE IN the old, oe HAUNTED HOUSE, eee AND WHEN I heard, eee AND TRIED to sloop, 1 HEARD rapping, AND sar “Rats.” AND ROLLED over. THEN! heard steps. AND IN the Ment. OFA dying moon, A WHITE spook rose. 1.WASBN’T scared—much, ee BUT DIDN’T fee! like, eee STARTING ANYTHING, eee - One man who looks | THE wench tate STAR NOTRE DAME COACH TEACHES HIS LINEMEN THE “COIL SPRING” NOTRE DAME, Ind, Nov, 5. | How the Notre Dame line holds out Jagninet opposing forward grid Jechines which outweigh it man for | man has been a great problem which confronts critics, Bach year ( Knute Rockne, of the Irish takes hia eleven to Wert Pi meh wind nt and holds the bi army line in spite of ed. b orn critics are unable te | understand why Rockne picks such Nght Mnewmen and are surprised to | Last season Re ‘es squad was .Harvard Depends on Famous “H & H” Formation _ BACKS | STAR | FOR __CRIMSON | the only one of the West which; which enables them to ppring for Nockne promises to surpam previ |A. T. C. eleven, who finished his lwent thru the season's play without | ward on a pnap sigeal and take the|ous years this fall. He has @ good | freshman year last June; - Anderson, | having its utcheon ameared by «| opponents by surprise, So his men|iine of veterans and ® promiaing| pick of several Eastern critics ~ |single defeat, And it took on such | become “ret” like a rattiomnake colled|bunch of last year’s freshmen to/an all-American berth last year, teams aa Nebraska, the Army, nidi-| up for @ spring at an enemy, work with right end, and Kiley, letter end. jana and Purdus, And last year the | TEACHES Notre Dame han alrendy defeated| In the backfield Rockne has two Gold and Blue tine was small CROUCH Weat Point and Nebraska | real veterans, George Gipp, who hae Rockne explains that he wants men! ‘To look at a man mM this posttion| ‘The line this year is heavier than|been the sensational halfback of th on the line who have «prirs in them | doesn't convince one that Rockne is| usual, but #till retains its epeed. The| West for the past three years and who are able to throw their force| right, It appears more tho the|line includes H. Anderson, star of | all-Western half, returned to school at an opponent on the spur of the| player wan resting oF taking it eawy.| last year, at guard; Capt. F. Cough-|and t# holding down the right halt moment. 80 he has developed a line| Yet the position stunt of Rockne’s!lin, all Western tackle Inst year;| back job, while Joe Brandy, varsity position which he terms the “coll po | brings results. His men always get|Smith, last year’s guard; Shaw, | quarterback for the past three years sition.” That is, he has his linesmen| the jump on opp nin, which gives | who won his letter at tackle; Larson, |and all-Western halfback of 1917, is ‘face their opponenta in @ crouch na big advantage I noted center of the Notre Dame 8.' giving the signals Science or the Old Sleep Wallop? hed for two months, Maybe then NO, 1—A. G. PELTON tragian Gaon weep ou'd call fishing my special hobby.” More and more, It seems, the gentle sex are coming to attend The fies thing the writer of ae | “Your biggest catch,” we hinted, F prize fights, or boxing exhibitions, if you préfer sor yg iin ie a Mage oh sted Pr lcatar! And it leads one to wonder just whas sort of boxing both men ||°Y*TY ™n ought to have a hobby |" War, * he answered and women would rathor see, so that when the enterprising re-| "A 4% pound baa right off the bat. maAtéwmn aan CAMBRIDGE, Maan A fighter is referred to as a scientific serapper—the fellow who | Mrt*r comes up to him « You can judge for yourself wheth we players on thie cong tl hasn't necessarily the K. 0. punch, but Is learned tn the ability to ‘What do you' go when or that's @ fish etory; team are expected to scintillate thelr sneak « pointcounting wallop in now and then, yet keep bis op- Sen BYRAL FOS TS SEDDON | Pelton eame to the Seattle schoot way into’ greater fame than they ponent clear. he ‘can, say he's COBecisg, GDS |. a breil Ledkviie. senile > have yet achieved and perhaps make ‘The other fellow may be the slugging, artignorant fighter who || PMying the fiddle, or wome other) "lll lun Oe in the same Eddie Caseys or Charley Brickieys || trusts to his healthy right or his wicked left to land just one blow— || "eh eecupation line of work. Before this he had f themscives. They are Captain and he feels that thet big blow will end the bout. You can imagine how Gisappoint |). at Minneapolis, Me is = grad Horween and Dick Humpbrey t would you rather see? A battle where blood ts spilled ed we were when the first man we)! o6 Cerin college, Ohio, where he Horween is already considered one J somebody gors keeplunk to the canvas, or battle where nterviewed mtoutty denied that he) 101 nis letter in the three major ‘ ot greatest offensive players of the real science of fistic encounter stands out? had any hobby and whiutso | corts, football, baseball and basket- ‘ years and it ts probable that this In view of the fact that more and more women actually are at- | /ever. The boy w coreg | titi é [Year will wee him at the senith of | tending prize fights, It would seem that sooner or later the scientifie || rector of physical education for the a | his prowens, for he ix in the greatest bouts are going to be more appreciated, Seattlel public schooln | tos ANGELY ‘ov, 5 —Witle physica tition 8 football man A man like that, now, who's tn! ritchie, who has faded from the prize “aa cou me attain. sports for his living ought to have | ring to the golf links, hag acquired Hard ss nats heavier than wver,| _FROSH STRONG | SOFT TAPE a hobby like debating, for tnstance.| retficient “till” to -enter Calliorti and with muscles like «teel, he has SYRACUBE, Nov. 5.~Coach Chick BACRAMEN Nov. 6.—Bortng | “But, ne be mays, “in the winter state tournaments, jreturned thin fall to try and lead! steenan will be well fixed at Syra| has been reopened at Sacramento! time I'm in athletion for the kids -—— ae, — Po to ry iA im ev o4 wenge es B use university neat year, His year with a new code which calls for the and in the summer I'm ip it for} NEW YORK, Nov. 6. — Ralj lays A there are those who ling football teams aiteady tas fbvet myself. | Greenleaf, professional pocket bil "© betieve he will mucceed. Last year he did not get inte shape and the mpelled to alternate between center and the backfiekt. He made 4 beth pl but he will be where he relly belongs this year 4n the backfield. He has tremendous speed and weighs over 200 pounds—a« weight |that he is more likely to increase than decrease, So you keep your eyes glued on Mr, Horween if [you like football sensations apidly developing into « player that gives great promise of being an extraordinary kicker is Dh Humphrey. Harvard has been very quirt about Humphrey's ability this year, but it's likely that he'll be thete like a Casey when the time comes for him to show, In addition he showed plenty of clam last year as an of fensive player afd he is one of the speediont haifbacks in the Mast Keep your eyes on the “H and H™ combination | BALL Dreamland $100. worth of Prizes for the Maskers. Admission 25¢ Everyone Welcome BUT THEN I canght. cee JUST A faint whit, oe OF A familiar, ee AND DELICIOUS smell. cee WHICH TIPPED me off, ee 80 | gave the ghost, ee THE HORSE laugh, eee AND SAID “Ed. eee YOU FAT guys. ee MAKE BUM ghosts, cee BUT BEFORE you fada, eee LEAVE WITH me one, eee OF YOUR cigarettes, . . THEY SATISFY.” ane HAT spicy, Aelicions aroma of fine tobaccos, both Turkish and Domestic, makes you almost hungry for the “satisty-smoke” And there isn't a ghost of a chance you'll ever find its equal anywhere—for the Chesterfield blend is an exclusive blend. It can't be copied, boxers to use soft tape on their! hands and limits seconds to one per} | tighter, “Take last summer for instance,” “I went up to where we camped iard champion, is offering $200 for @ Lake! $15 cue which ts lost, He prized the and cue as high oped power enough to down the var he ‘continued, Barnamish, heasty: Price Reduction Every Suit and Overcoat at Cheastys. 25% OFF Tomorrow Will Be a Busy Day, So Come Early Hats 25% Discount DUNLAP’S AND KINDRED MAKES Suits $26.25 to $63.75 KUPPENHEIMER AND. COMPANION LINES Dress Suits Included “Values Tell” SECOND AVENUE AT SPRING STREET STR A TRE AR NR RERLNAN SN PANE NEE 7