The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 17, 1920, Page 14

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PAGE 14 IT’S UP TO BASKETBALL MANAGERS WHETHER OR NOT STAR LEAGUE IS ORGANIZED; MEET TONIGHT NIGHT all basketball team managers interested in the organization of The Star city : basketball league are aske office, 7th ave. and University Whether or not the league is formed depends upon the decision o team managers present. The} Star organized and operated) the first city cage league that) Seattle ever had, last ye | ‘The Star is again ready to oporate | @ circuit if there a enough teams willing that The Star should go ahead with their plana STAR TO HELP If the majority of the team man-| agers decide to follow different plans | for the season The Star will give them aff the help in their organtma | tion that they need to make it a suc cons, | Organized sport ts the only sue | in its cessful sport and basketball, turn, has been organized by The) Str, If the different teams around Seattle think that they have reached | ® stage where they can better handle their own league The Star will be *anly too glad to help them. | agatn | But our sport department ts feady to organize another Star) Teague if enough teams want The Star to go ahead with the organiza tion. So it’s important that every man ager interested in such an organiza tion be present tonight so we can know just what further plans to make for the season. Arrangements for floors for the feagon have been made ‘The rules and regulations that governed the league last year will be gone over, if the teams want an @ther Star league, and necesmury ad justments will be made. Officers Will be clected and an executive committee wil! be appointed. As we have tried to emphasize again and again, The Star is organiz ing basketball for the good of the game and is willing to make aj) ar Fangements for floors, referees and @ schedule. There are no charges) connected with the entries of teams in The Star circuit. Each team is asked to furnish its own team with suits and to purchase a basketball Managers should bear this in mind before attending tonight's session. | Fwenty-one Dartmouth football play- the condition in which the reg- | vd al out of the Brown game. Captain Jim Robertson, who has the game most of the an injured shoulder, ts to play, it is thought. will stop in Chicago and Paul, and it is expected to arrive Wednesday night. : GRAMMAR SOCCER FINALS ' Five teams are left in the race for | the city grammar school soccer title! in Class A. They are Rainier, La- tona, Georgetown, Warren Ave. and | Green Lake. Tha first-named squads) meet this afternoon on the upper ‘Woodland park grounds, at 3:45. The | winner will meet Georgetown, and | the winner of this game will meet ner of the Warren Ave.- Lake struggle. The latter set for Saturday morning, | F. Day grounds, for 10:20. | teams are in the race in the Class B~Tivision, with Hawthorne | playing the Salmon Bay team at B.) B. Day today and the winner playing Sencord for the title later. | iy i FRANCISCO, Nov. 17--Ef- bring the Céntre college foot to the Coast for a post-| game will be made by Lieut. J. J. Caveney, an athletic off- cer of the Pacific fleet. ‘The fleet is possessed of a football team numbering several old-fime An. | mapolis star® which has cleaned up) everything it went after Coast. Full schedules, however, have team meeting . Cav-} ‘ney announced he has $5,000 to a game with Centre. Wiores, Bud Ridley, Beattie bantarn. ‘® bout with Joe Coffey lined up for & vember 2. Ridley meets a bantam from Chicago! by the name of Howard in a four-round | #0 at Bremerton tonight. Joe Siminich, the Butte (Mont.) welter, in in: Seattle, He may be Jined ap to box Travie Davis at the Cryvtel Poot next Tuesday. ‘The Seattle Motorcycle club will give at the Mercer Cycle shop at , Thursday. Ail motorcy je to attend, | Dan fait chirped over the telephone thin morning that he noticed that wie Davis is looking for opponenta. says Billy Wright in ready to box any old time, Billy outpointed the inat time they fought and wae the decision, fo leave Boston Saturday for Seattle, |'°* Ssturdar. | ment ed to attend the ‘ond meeti) st. at 8 p. m. nC ng of the league at The Star f the majority of the CULLY WILSON JOINS NEW HOCKEY CLUB; OTHERS MAY SIGN is joining the new Toronto clu! | HEN Roy Rickey, Seattle hockey defense star, leaves for the East today he won't go alone. companied by Cully Wilson, former Seattle forward. He will be ac- Rickey b, which is matiaged by a bird named Livingstone, who is the “outlaw” in Eastern hockey. Livingstone, it seems, has obtained control of the Toronto arena and he plans to start a league of his own. Wilson was a member of the Toronto National Hockey as- sociation club last year. Cull, in Seattle, says that he would that Prexy Patrick won't let orously for the boys. Wilson also said that he h the new club. Wilson mentio: and thes urday. hop om the rattlers for Beattie, where ers with managers and coaches, are ther tangie with Washingtoa the follew- The Army tackles Colby at Weat Potnt, and the Navy plays Aieorge Washiagton at Annapolis. Amhérst_ and Wilitame meet in their annual (uswle al Amherst this week. UNDER WAY me. 005-Fo a sot Saturday. Minnesota and Michipan tangle at mneapolie, and Iows and lows State ly, who has spent the summer like to play on the Cpast, but him because he plays too vig- ad heard from the East that Cleghorn, the famous Ottawa defense star, would also join ned Meeking, of Victoria, and Skinner and one of the Adams boys of Vancouver as other Coast men who were slated to join the new organization, according to what he had heard from the East. lanford battle Const. with ‘The game tm the Coast » Chicage and Wisceusta ge to the mat at Chicage. Notre Duma candidate tor the Me | Pasadena game tanries [ern at Bvansten Contre colines tackion Virginia Retr at Lonterilie in one of the big games in ihe South Wesrsia 1 pontine ena Idaho mix ot | Washington ts idie Saturday. ‘The Queen Anoe Frankie prep game |may be played November 24 tnatead of Maturday bersuse emalipes bas broken out at the Mt Baker asthecl and the | members of the grid team have been ac eimated with the rest of the student body. Lincoln and Broadway will clos, the local prep grid season on Turkey Day. The place for the strugele fas hot been lL announced. ONLY MIRACLE CAN BEAT BALLARD OUT OF TITLE Only & miracle can beat the Ral- lard high school eleven out of the city prep gridiron championship. The Ballard team meets West Se- attle in the final game of the season for the two clevens at the Coast league bal park Friday. Ballard has won three straight games and tied ome and hasn't been scored on this year, while the West Seattle Indians haven't won a game this season. West Seattle must turn in a win in order to tie up the race. A tle game | Friday wil] give the Ballard team a clear title to the championship. A Weat Seattle win would put Lincoin, Franklin, Ballard and Broadway on even footing. The high school teama are so even- ly matched this year, however, that | the West Seattic team might spring | the unexpected and walk off with | the game. It's a 100 to 1 shot that | they won't | During the season the Ballard team has scored just one touchdown, counting it against Queen Anne, as the result of a Queen Anne fumbie The Franklin and Lincoln games were both won by drop kicks rent be | tween the uprights by John Harri- son, the big Beaver tackia The Ballard defense has been {ts strongest department this season. The line is expecially strong, with experienced men and with plenty of weight from end | to end. j ‘The place for the Intter game has not been selected as yet. ELECT NEW A. A. U. EXECUTIVE BOARD BY HENRY L. FARRELL NEW YORK, Nov. 17-—Autocratic vatives is at an end. ‘aying heed to thé demands of the ‘soviet of athletes” formed Inst summer in Antwerp before the Olym- pic Games, the Amateur Athletic union has decided upon a change of faces and policies among the gov ernors of athletics. CHICAGO, Nov, 18.—‘Achieve not words” will be the plat form of Federal Judge K. M."Landis, baseball's newest ruler. Landis, discussing plans for base ball's future, said Chicago was to be the Mecca for baseball pilgrims, He will make his headquarters here and | squabbles which may arise will be brought to Chicago for him to decide. “While I was making my decision as to whether I baseball offer, men came to me and said, ‘By all means, take it! Leave the bench! You have earned it!” Landis waid, “There seems to be a great concern in some rinds about my ability to handle both Jobs. They are not afraid I won't do my work— they are afraid 1 will do my work. AN EXPERT “She's an expert on the outja board.” “That so?” “Yep. Sho can make it say any- thing you want to hear.’—Detrott Free Press, | The “insurgent ticket” headed by Re Juntice Bartow $ | Weeks, an office holder in the union |for yearn, wan defeated with the rest of the “old guard.” | In addition, a committer of WT. liam C. Proutt, Jeremiah Mahoney and Charles B. Lynch was appointed |to investigate the charges made by |the Olympic athletes against the committee in charge of the American team in Antwerp. This committer also will seek to jlearn the method employed by the committee in picking the American | team, | Charges made by the rifle and | pistol team and the oarsmen that |they had to pay their expenses out of their own pockets, altho funds | had come from other sources, aiso | will be investigated, with Nerthweet- | in every ponition | bert 8. Weaver, of the Low Angeles | on the|domination of amateur athletic# In| athietic club, was elected in ita en |the United States by the New York|tirety, over the choice of the New the| Athletic club and a group of com) York dictators, THE SEATTLE Alex Trambitas Sh FOR | ANACORTES Alex Trambitas, the Portland | welter, has about as much | chance of taking a decision back to the Kose Clty with him from & Seattle ring, as there is for | the boys and girl, to see Mayor | Caldwell do a Highland fling at Second ave, and Vike st, Trambitas outhoxed Jimmy Storey, local boy, thruout the four rounds of their bout last night,, and the best he got was a draw, dimmy's lone score was counted in the second round, when he landed # right that made Alex roel, but the Port lander hit the local bey five punches to one thruout the «en tre b Alex used Nite left well, and also jused a shift that bothered jhitting In the tummy with his left then bringing the same mitt inst James" jaw, AL SCORES KNOCKDOWN Storey | Alex scored the only knockdown | |tm the third, when he tipped Storey | lover, #0 that Jim's hands were rest jing on the floor for no count. | Both men fought a jbut Tramt areful fight, | did all of the forcing, | Jand he bad Storey mwinging wildly at the close of the bout, | It waa a great night for Anacortes! in the preliminaries, Ray Serttmer, the Anacortes featherweight, alam: | med Filipino Kid Martin on the jaw! with a wild right in the closing see onds of the first round. The bell In terrupted Referee Whitman's count ing, but M y Litien hte continue. This ts Sertbner's sec ond knockout in three starts here. We ought to see more of him, | NEI. STOPS } MOORE | | ‘The same goes for Maddie Nell, a bantam, who also halle from Ana corten, Nell outboxed and out lugged Eddie Moore, the local fy weight, thruout the first two rounds of their bout, and be finally popped Moore on the chin in the third round and, altho Eddie tried to shake the bees out of his bonnet, he was count led out for the first time | Nell in & clever kid for a young was in | eter, He boxes well and has a goot | defense, as well as a nifty attack. He) wan stepping inside of Moore's jewings continually and when he wasn’t making Moore mina he beat! the Seattle miller to the punch. In the semiwindup Young Stanley Ketopell, of Lewis Idaho, tugned lout to be a busher, as far aa boxing | |e concerned. He ts a wild swinger. JAt that he was given the verdict over Young Zuru. He Mailed Zusu considerably during the first two Touma, Hoth boys tired during the | closing rounds, and there was quite | bit of hanging on. Ketchell really | landed the more clean punches and, | In ouF opinion, was entitled to the verdict. JACKSON DRAWS Edie Jackson wns rather lucky to | get a draw with Willie St. Claire, the! colored lightie from Sacramento, st. | | Claire in @ clever fellow with a good jlett hand. He showed a tendency to run away @ lot in the closing! rounds when Jackson started to hit }him with hie trusty right Thi draw decision was pretty well o cepted, however, as Jackson's | punches carried the most steam. st Claire showed enough to warrant another bout here Joo Wopp was cheated In the cur. | tain raiser when Referee David called the beut a draw. Wopp foored/ | Hugh Curley, his opponent, twice tn dhe first round and had a shade thruout the rest of the going. The show was put on by Clay | Hite for the American Legion, and & goodly crowd of ring customers at tended the festivities, which were staged at the Crystal Pool. | Ad Schacht referred the last two} bouts, Ted Whitman called the ver dicts In the third and fourth bouta while Roy David officiated in the! opening pair. FAKE TICKETS ON SALE FOR CAL. GAME BERKELEY, Cal. Nov, 17.-~| Warning that counterfeit tickets to the Californian Stanford game here Saturday have been “placed on the market” and are being sold at exor. bitant figures, was txsued today by | Lute Nichols, graduate manager of the University of California, | “No one can posseswins many tick. | ets as some of the sealpers seem to have, on account of our method of selling them,” he said | Any large blocks of tickets offered | for sale, he declared, must be coun. | | terfeit. | 1221-Th ird Anyone wearing Jewelry or nice at my big Prize Thankaxiving ul | WARNING! would accept the) Hard Time: Ki phen| A STAR for a mark © fat the first base berth manager, has denied etuen, u Ruth will the pit Huth will play for the Yanks, Pittedure fans are ploking George Cut and i OFFICIALS TO DISCUSS PREP PUCK LEAGUE Pete Muldoon, manager of the na, and Athletic Director Pelton, of the local high schools, will meet Thuraday to discuss the feasibility of inaugurating @ prep school hockey league this season. Muldoon states that he te willing to donate the Arena every Friday night for gamer, and that he may make plant for practice sessions is also Muldoon’s plan to cut down each game for the the time limit of juniors, Pelton thinks that the league can be worked out; at least, he made no adverse statement regarding the cir cult, and judging from the fact that he will go into conference with Mul doon means that he ts giving the idea some consideration, It is understood that Rallard, Proadway and Franklin have prelim inary plane made for entering teams Prep Grid Stars No. 4—Phil Fraser, West Seattle Tackle. Playing with a losing team doesn't always goad a grid player on to do his best, but Phil Fraser, the giant tackle of the West Seattle Indians, is putting up a pretty brand of ball in the line for the tribe. He knows how to use his weight and is especially strong on the defense. He also does the punting and for- passing for his team. ward LOEW S PALACE HIP INTINUOUS 170 11 1OW ACKERMAN G TOMORROW, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SNAPPY NEW SHOW oF VAUDEVILLE —With— The International Revue A Distinet Novelty Other Acts of Quality Feature Photoplay [a AKRI r A Afternoon Prices %e Children 150 ades Jim Storey; Bout Is Draw i] WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1920. | “HOGE” IS SEASON’S BEST PASSER” BY DEAN SNYDER | Ohio State tan't a school for aviators. Thut the Wilee eleven has earned the name of being one of the oe chief “flying machines” in the Went-| orn Conference thin full, due to the wuccess of the nerial attack The Buckeyes are forward pass ing their way toward the title And the p hief of the team ix the Versatile “Hoge* Work wiry and man. Watching the Ohioans play tw a great deal like attending a ball game pd where Babe Ruth is being starred. me At the ball game you watch Ruth 5 almost entirely, being only casually 1a > interested in the other players is They're the setting for the Bam iz bino. t = RUNNING MATE > At Oblo State's games you're keep = ing an eye on Quarterback Workman Pew and that speedy running mate of — his—Pete Stincheomb, whom some =) have picked aa “Chick” Harley's — egitimate muccensor. Hut the performance of Workman is proving an even greater drawing | ecard than Stincheomb. | | “Hoge” is @ wpectacular fellow | The way he gets his signals off puts | & certain spice in the atmosphere. | He puts color into every play, | whether shooting passes’) on the dead run, booting a drop kick, pick ing holes thru the scrimmage heaps or exchanging puta, WILCE | OPTNIG | ‘The answer to the Buckeye victor- les over Win in, Purdue and Chi Here's “Hoge” Workman, who has been pulling Ohio State’s games | of the fire for them this season by his wonderful forward passes. § of his shots tape a little over 45 yards. stands the game, too. After every} accounts for his success in thi game she gets a wire from the boys| ing forward panses, informing her of the result If the Buckeye star qua | cago, can all be #aid in @ few words.| Hoth “Hoge” and Noe! are banket-| keeps on improving, he'll find j It was the passing of the ball by| pall players. They play the forward me written on the All-Am Workman and his field general-| positions and are expert bask thical eleven before he has turm thip. shooters, “Hoge” also playn base-\ed in his cleats and headgear /@t Coach Wiles looks upon his find an a stat who has not yet fully de ball. He is a pitcher, Maybe that! Ohio. T TOW | Huw home town, is all worked up over the Workmana, The family is a sort} ASO AINA “tio tape | FROSH TEAM , EDMUNDSON “He has much yet to learn,” sayn| player “ieiow if the felt. Hes Jost) ~~ GRIDDERS CAGE SQUAD 21 years old and weighs but 160 nai . ae <°"* Sden v pounds, His brother, Noel, ts play.| Altho the University of Washing-| “Heo! cdmundson, University : ball trainer, has been sppoin | Workman to Workman pass that| games scheduled this season, the| }'*!ls jrayethall coach at one made the Chicagoans finally bow to| yeartings will continue to turn out | until after the Dartmouth-Washing-| Allison, who will tutor the frosh Bm HOME ‘ton game which will be held in the| team every night at 7 o'clock when they go thru an hour of strenuous traim nae" = ©="| AIDS VARSITY | TO COACH “W” of fellow off the field. He in just ling end on the team and it was a| ton frosh football team has no more | Of Washington track coach and foo’ | sity this year. He succeeds Len the Ohlo eleven, The new coach has his men ing. tington, West Virginia, their) New Stadium the Saturday following | : 4 Thanksgiving. Coach “Sanay* Wick of the year-| e . " ling team will alternate his men in} '"® of an institution to them down | -rimmaging with the ‘varsity enti ours has 0 wealth ot me | Here's the reason. For the last | he super-varnity. popular coach will turn out a crack |10 yeare the Workmans have sup | The addition of another squad to e il sted t backs for the Hunt-| *rimmage with the first team will) ae ord perch, oo . | go @ long ways in getting them in/ An cider brother called the sig. im for the big game. SOT ised nan tk, Sees) von the tone IMMUNITY FOR CICOTTE? fn 1914 and 1915. “Hoge” took up! the job for three years in 1916.) | Their kid brother, Tommy, tanded| CHICAGO, Nov. . 17.— Immunity | the quarterback position when | will be given Eddie Clootte, White | “Hoge” and Noel came to Ohio last) sox pitcher, who confessed he ac- | team which will put Washington on the Pacific Coast conference mag again, COLIMA WINS FROM EGAN LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 17. Bert Colima won all the way fi Joe Egan of Boston here last |in a four-round main event that was year. cepted $10,000 to play “crooked base-|a disappointment. Egan's pet MOTHER ball against the Cincinnati Reds injwas to wrap one arm an | 18 FAN the 1919 world’s series, it was report-|Colima’s neck and fall away te Quarterback abfity runs tm the) ed today. Cicotte’s confession impli- Workman family, The mother cated seven other White Sox play- }im a fan then and thru. She under-lers under indictment. MAYOR DECLARES NOV. 27 A HOLIDAY DIUM DEDIC the free mitt. Colima took round, but few clean blows, landed. TO HONOR “W” STA ATION BY TOM OLSEN jasked to excuse as many of thelr em-| sold for $3, unreserved for $2, and Mayor Hugh M. Caldwell has pro Ployes as possible. tickets for high school and grammas | claimed the afternoon of Saturday,| More than 10,000 tickets have been | #chool pupils will be $1. : | November 27, a city holiday, in hon-| sold for the contest, with orders com-| All plaques will be In the mail or of the dedication of the new) ing in at a rapid gait. later than Friday, November 19, ao Washington stadium and the first, The stadium will be thrown open! cording to Kent Radcliffe, who ia intersectional football contest ever to ticket holders at 12 noon, Satur-| handling them. . held in Seattle, between the Dart- day, November 27, and the dedica-| Only six tickets will be eold to ome mouth and University of Washing: tion ceremony will be at 1:30. ‘The| individual, to prevent ton ¢levens. big grid contest will start ied aaa | Stadium tickets are on sale at The mayor's proclamation read at 2 p. m. A. SU. W. office, on the Uni that “only the necessary business| The rooters’ section will be limited! campus, Spalding’s and Piper @ that cannot be suspended” will be to students and faculty members| Taft's, in Seattle, and in Everett, carried on, and employers have been|only. The reserved tickets will be! Snohomish, Tacoma and Spokané, Spur Cigarettes were made to go in the front rank—and there was no mis- take in the making. Out in front of the field—and there to stay. That’s Spur. American and Imported tobaccos, ‘ blended in a new way, to bring out that good old tobacco taste. ; Crimped, not pasted, making a slow- — | er-burning, easier-drawing cigarette. Satiny, imported paper. Smart brown and silver package that is a sure sign of good breeding. That’s Spur—a “cinch bet” for a sure winner. Get aboard! Kpctontgredrtenl ¥

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