The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 7, 1920, Page 12

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T_race xs SMOKE IS CALLED OFF Tudee Ronald, .of the superior eourt, upheld the ruling of the Beat. tle boxing commission Monday by Tefusing to «grant an AgAinst the commission on the pet. tion of Thomas Swale, state com. injunction Ss mander of the American Lagton, in Re Dehalf of the Northwest Athietio ‘ club, and so tonight's smeker sched uled for the Pool has been called off by the American Legion. # ‘The local mitt alingers wit! now 4 Proceed to take a rest until the com mission and the Metropolitan build ing company oan get together, The commission has taken upon itself the burden of seeing to it “that all the es promoters who wish to stage smok- Bf ers have a place to show and the Metropolitan building company won't be dictated to. That's the situ ation in a nutshell. fi Cal Delaney, Ohio welter, billed to _ box Joe Simonich, came up to the Crystal Pool Monday noon with his right hand swathed tn a bandage, claiming that he strained it In fall. re Ing at the Savoy hotel. | gs Biot Pus, in May. session. i i it t t i i i ; Ef jt i i it i ti ptf yo ! i i i i id ? Hl fH Dame-Army, il : ii : 3 Fi Ss Next season claims for the vari ous football championships may be more clearly established. More than the usual number of inter. sectional games are being ar- sarod og oe the real leaders, mong tilts in prospect are Harvard-Illinois, Princeton- Chicago, Yale-Ohio State, Notre HarvardNotre Dame, Yale-Georgia Tech, Har- vard-Center and Harvard-Army. CUBS PLAN TO SIGN the leadership of Ed Liv- , Ingetone, which was scheduled to get under wey in the Kam Saturday, didn't Bet started because of sume adverse lit! Batten in the courts, No word hae been Teesived here of their plans for the sea- fon. or what teams besides Toronto have GIPP during practice, throwing the oval, accuracy in hurling it with gunshot | speed soon won a gridiron place. peace e ineneaeaet “W” CREW PRACTICE TO OPEN JAN. 4 Crew Coach Leader of the Univer-| sity of Washington, will have his men out January 4 for the spring practice co ng en had star member of Notre | Dame's football team, may be seen! ness Judgmen: in a major league baseball uniform | , . at Chicago next year. Gipp is now in| & critical condition from pneumonia | At South Bend, Ind. Johnny eae the Chicago Cub's | new pilot, is a great admirer of Gipp, who is rated as one of the cleverent | HONS TURTURE center fielders in collegiate baseball, and has » reputation as a slugger. Gipp broke into football thru his baseball prowess, His accuracy as a thrower lured him to the gridiron and he took to His ease and The fall practice ended the latter Part of last month. Several football men, who were | unable to turn out for the fall prac- tice, will be on hand for the spring Shortly after the spring practice begina Leader will pick the varsity and froeh squads and the select few will be quartered at the crew house for the rest of the season. The proposed new ¢onstitution for | Tilinals includes the privilege of in.) termarriage between whites and Meg roCs. | jump to Salt Lake and back. Vanceuvér has proved itnelf to be a good long that precedes the | big races at the Oakland Betuary | RANK FRISCH has signed his 1921 contract with the New York Giants | and is ready t0 go, John McGraw already has announced that his plan is to shift the brilliant young collegian over to second bane. using Goldie Rapp on third—unteas, of oc the deal for Rogers Hornsby goes thru. Frisch is & great ball player, without a doubt, but whet the will do as well at second as at third remains to be seen, He was | handicapped last season by illness at the start, but went fast once he got in there and a lot of New York fans think had he been with the team at | the beginning af the season the Giants would have won enough gamer 1im April and May to have made them pennant winners, Frisch is one of | the fastest men on * in the National league, and a splendid fielder, | | Handicapped as he was by the iiness that necessitated @ surgical oper ation and weakened physically, he managed to hit around 280 after he got in the game regularly and ranked among the leaders in base stealing Seasoned by the experience of last year he should be a wonder in 1924, | THE MEETING of the Pacific International league to be held at Tacoma | Sunday holds more than ordinary Interest to Coast league fans, A state ment ts expected from Reb Brown, Vancouver, B.C, magnate, regarding Vancouver's plans Yor' the coming season, Rumor has had it that Van leouver will take over the Salt Lake franchise next year, If Vancouver enters the Coast league it means that the 1. league will have to re) organten, There has deen some talk of the league disanding and a coast clrouit and an inland league organtaed instead, SUNDAY'S P. I. LEAGUE meeting, whieh will disclose Vancouver's plans for the 1921 season, will give Coast league fans an inkling of what te ox | pect at the Const league session to be held in Sacramento, December 16. | | If the Salt Lake-franchise i wo be shifted it will be done then. SEATTLE MAY BAVE continuous Sunday baseball, at leant tf Vancouver | gets in the Coast ctroult, because baseball is taboo in Vancouver on Bunday no doubt but what the acquisition Vancouver would be a big financial’ asset to the Coast circuit, because it would cut out the long baseball town by its support of Clase B teams. THE SALE OF Far! Sheety and Ernie Johnson te the Chicago White Sox by Salt Lake may be taken as an indication hat the Sait Lake owners | plan to shift the franchise to some other city, Johnson went to the Sox) for a cash consideration and so did Sheely, agcouple of mediocre players being thrownein. Of course “Cactus” Cravath has been named manager for next year, but that doesn't mean anything, If the Salt Lake owners expected to stick In the Coast league it seama aa if they would be more | lanxious to obtain players for Johnson and Sheely than money, because | | players of Class AA caliber are harder to get nowadays than coin. SINCRK MIKE KELLEY, St. Pau! manager, has dectined the offer of Prexy Baker to pilot the Philadelphia Nationals next year, the big ques tiontas to whom will accept the burden of managing the Phillies is the big talk of the present time in Rastern bageball. Several candidates are maid to be after the job, among whem are mentioned Wild Hill Denovan, CHILD PRODIGIES CREATE A BIG STIR IN WORLD ATHLETIC We have with us little Samuel|Alloen Riggin, © Idyearold New| signed by the Giants, He in the| “w” wiw 1 Pig, , Raonzownki, the Syearold Polish} york girl, recently won the world's | Youngest ball player to break inte) ANNUAL (2 — prodigy of the chess board. This! diving championship at Antwerp, | bia league | q youthful wizard has just come over | wiltie Hoppe was a boy wonder with| AM4 we must not forget agg er | BANQUET 9 { anake in bis f to compete against the American | the cue. Hoppe won the world’s title | WMO strangled & hum masters of the greatest mental gume | at the age of 18 and has held it over | °TM4!*. Some baby! DEC. 14 in the world. since, Ralph Greenleaf is only @ boy | eta —Ic . + only & bey | BERKELBY, Cal, Dec, 1—Coach| ‘The annual banquet for the foot Rrodigion are not only rare, but| now, and he has been pool champion | BON MARCHE LEAGUE unexplainable. Nature” works won-| for a year or two, Vineent Richards |ADdy Smith, University of Califor: | pai letter winners at the University ders Indeed, Now and then there|is the child wonder of the tennis nia grid monjor, is working his men |of Washington will be held Tuesday | 72m es b cons we rom ps erg | . rts, and Bobby Jones erartied the | hard for the coming Kast-Waeat con evening, December 14, at the New | Ne : pon us 6 ; " and of genius, who| golfing world at the age of 15. HAG tose with Ohio State University at ” wurpasneth al understanding, For | Hanlon, a populer litle lightweight " peel eet Ml Dafa ag. gg me ar eel instance, Inaudi, the fumoun idiot, | of the Pacific coant some years ago, | Peeedena New Year's Day | he bie feature of the evening | Mo ¢ team é uo who wad so deficient mentally that! fought 20 rounds against Young Cor-| Art Mueller, Dean Snyder's Alb! will be the election of next year's BANKERS’ LEAGUE it was necessary to him, yet | bett for th American pick for end is showing | captain just before the banquet. ‘Team — aw. be he could «ive immediate anawers to of 17 Taylor of up well in scrimmage The big 1%| Speeches by Captain Paulk, | seattle Netional..... 21 19 2 the most complex mathematical days was heavyweight champion of |Coaches Allison and Solon, Oradu soe ” problems pommible to devise the world when only 16, sSteve|7Oerold lad is regarded as the bert) .:. wanager Darwin Meisnest and a Mental prodigies, lke 11{ttle| Bloomer was the greatest football /°M4 that has ever played on the | others actively connected with the ;o. f Recssewoki, a player In England at the youthful! Coast past football season. ld physical ones, 3 $$ - iene — and musicians we be kind.” Hoffman was & wonder baby E y Mosart composed music at the age of 3. Gothe was & marvelous infant. f Durer, Gainesborough and Michel BY TAD |® great fighter in times of near etare.|he in of the dancing Dervish type.|a middleweight in strength. Angelo w prodigies in art. J. B. In the New York Joarnal He would have been a great light| He is in and out, here and there,| Whether Lonard can go 20 Millais waa admitted to the Royal! Never before has the lightweight) weight at any time. | up and down, feinting with his head.| rounds with a fellow of We academy at the age of 9. division been picked clean as it in at) Whether he would shine in the! In this he resembles Jim Corbett,| makeup, however, is another The greatest mental prodigy ever present. Benny Leonard has dry- company of Gans, McFadden, Erne,| Jack O'Brien, Johnny Kilbane and | yon. known was probably the little Ger- picked the division once ruled by | McAuliffe, Hawkins, Lavigne, Nelson, | Packy McFarland. | ge @ Welling three man bey, Otto Pobler, who could! Jack McAuliffe so that there's not Griffo and Dobbs ix a question. | ‘They were all of the bitand-get | ing ons * Sat anueen'e read, write, and do mathemationl oven a pin feather of opporition left.| He has nearly everything a good| away variety. | him out, and in the 14th, after ka lems at the Age of 14 months. Some opponents he knocked for| fightor needs, and uses what he has| They baified thetr opponents with! i. 6 joe down again, seemed Winnifred Stoner of Pittsburg was trips; with others he did the Dan | like a general. . | tricks and speed. | end thiess. able to talk at the age of 6 months O'Leary, and still othere he fright-| His punch is heavy, but we can't; They pecked away with lefts,| “7 tweet and spoke ¢ight languages by the ened almost back to the feather-|say that it In deadly. He seldom danced around, pecked again, and| time she was § years old. And we weight clans. | stops his man with one blow, as did suddenly shot a right from nowhere. cuest wet fereee the prenmmbéar| See Weemag Was: the Uist of Gic| Gans, Mires, MaAui@e and Mawnina,| Shas to Leonard the referee wafted to stop the wuper-ntudent, Edward Harvey, of top-notch lightweights to erons bate | yet he ia known asa knockeront, || In his fight with Welling he showed | he should bave done eo In the Columbia university, whe is now 12 with Leonard, and after a wonderful; It may be that Leonard, with his | everything had, He also showed | round. years old and speake 12 lan@uages, exhibition was led from the ring dancing tactica, lones the power of that he wan the stronger of the tw “Leonard was #0 tired tn the t However, there are a few prodigies tagged “Broken in transit.” his punch. lim the clinches. Welling swung| sald Welling, after the go, “that in sport Leonard is not the greatest Neht-| He is not the gtiding, easy-coing around Leonard like « twig around «| coulén’t keep his hands up, let Georges Carpentier began his ring weight boxer that ever lived. Me in| boxer of the Gans school. Instead,’ post tn the clinches. Leonard seemed! knock me out.” Welling insists that he could gone the distance. He says t former Detroit pitcher; Hans Wagner, former Pittsburg shortstop; Otto Knabe, former Philly second aacker; Charlies Deotn, former Philly pilot George Burns and Pep Young, New York outfielders. EASTERN BASEBALL writers are slating Harry Hellman, Detroit firet sacker, and Donie Bush, Tiger shortstop, for a change next season, both being mentioned as wearing White Sox unies In 1921. JHellman te well known on the Coast, playing with the old Portland Northwestern league teams years ago. Ho is said to be one of the hardest hitting righthanded batters in baseball, Bush i# oa the decline, but still has some good base- ‘ball left in his LOS ANGELES SCRIBE PANS COAST CONFERENCE BY DARSIE L. DARSIE | If the “holier than thou” coanei! In the Les Angeles Record j has seen Mit to question the morals ‘The “holier than thou” counel! of of the U.S C. eleven in having & the Pacific Coast conference colieges Washington man on the team, what met at Berkeley- and, after much must they think of California with pro and con (principally con), re oot & San Francisco player on their fused admission to the University of lineup? Southern California. | What must they think of Stan ‘This refusal was based on the| ford with only one Palo Alto man technical ground that Los Angeles and not a San Franciscan gm the was too far distant from other mem. team’ Southern Californians are bers of the conference. But no se | wondering if it might be that the leret was made of the fact that U.| Northern institutions would rather |. C, was thought to bid heavily for |not have a consistently a good | athletes from the Northweat! | team as U. & C. in the conference Sach ground was taken In epite| What claim can the Pacific con of the fact that, altho there is at ference have to being “good sports”? least one Southern Californian on | Many things might be mid of some each Northwestern team, and the | of the elevens of the Northwest, but California and Stanford elevens are U. 8. C. ie not prone to gossip. U made up almost entirely of Southern |S. Cs» scholarship was not ques boys, U. 8 C. has just toned. but gossip ran riot in the jone northerner on the team |"holier than thou” couneil. | MAY STOP | '3756%0 Bay. “Pro” Football Chick” Harley, former Ohio Btate All Ameriean halfback and Qesistant coach, doesn't approve of professional football at all if he did he'd be approximately $750 richer today. it became known that “Chick” wan offered $750 by the Chlengo Logan Squares to play in their backfield on Thankegiving day. “Chick” turtled down the offer and went to Pittsburg to see the Pitt Penn State game. The Logan Squares also offered “Pete” Stinchoomb, star Buckeye halfback, $200 to play in the game. Of course, “Pete” also re fused. OAKLAND, Cal, Dec. 7--An ordi. nance placing stringent regulations | J over boxing matches in Oakland was) | Presented to the city council today | by Police Comminsioner Morse, as a | result of the so-called San Francisco “vie# mang” outrages, |. Morse declared that boxing brutal izes the nature of many men making such attacks as the one in the How jard street shack and the killing of the three pence officers at Santa Rosa yesterday possible. ‘The ordinance, if passed, would re |quire the filing of affidavits or cer tificates of good character, including | proof that the person involved never| Dueling has been legalized by the |had been under arrest, before any legislature of Uruguay, |man could box In Oakland LAER OLIN GEREN BES EO OE TS OO Commissioner Hacous declared that if the ordinance passed there would be no more boxing in Oakland. " Commissioner Edwards defended. rou ness the boxing game saying “rome of the | cleanest minded boys in the country \engaged in boxing a profession.” aa ED | every transaction, : are ac every cour- tesy consistent with seund busi- 4% Weld om Savings Accownts Aecounts Subject te Check Ave Cor- Can be eliminated by wearing the) banaber Rupture Support. We give triaf to prove ite superior A. LUNDBERG CO, | One of Seattle’s Oldest Established Dental Offices Special arrangements for out-of-town patients whose time is limited. Modern methods — high-class dentistry — low ‘ prices. These we offer you. Electro Painless Dentists Laboring People’s Dentists : 4. BR. VAN AUKEN, Manager Located for years at 8. EK. Corner First and Ptke, Phone Main 2655 Over Owl Drug Store. ' Cheasty’s Removal Sale It’s not in keeping with the policy of CHEASTY’S to carry over from season to season stock of past seasons; much less when we move to a new store. CHEASTY’S will open the new store with a new stock, even though the smartest and best stock ever assembled in Seattle must go quickly. That’s why we take the loss NOW. Positively nothing reserved. Clothing—33'3% Off Suits and Overcoats Se Gal occouaie, Bath Robes Such famous tailors as the | $8? Suits and Overcoats, Comfort is the keynote of our House of Kuppenheimer and com- Pa ans pte oy inviting line of Lounging Robes, panion lines are represented in Sujts and Overcoats, Bath Robes and Smoking Jackets. our matchless stock of smart suits Suits and Overcoats, 00 Attractive off are now and overcoats. Rerbeesy Over- ; te a | bmn riced as low as $5.36 (formerly pg gy Sierpbinn’ aoe oe sol Geteae poe oe $46.70" (tormerly offered at a price discount of $3: Suite a Sone $70.00). Between these two prices 33%%. i go tags -remain— $30 Suits and Overcoats, range many other values. Take just take off one-third. your fancy’s choice. Furnishings—25% Off — Neckwear ..........+-+- Suit C: Wess veeus elena Nejc THE NEW PRICES —— fu (are.---— 00.38 unas Handkerchiefs. Tuxedo Sets ........$2.63 to $7.13 Hat Boxes ..,.......$11.25 to $16.88 Suspenders... .- Hosiery .......++++..-B7¢ to $3.75 Fitted Suit Cases. .$41.25 to $112.50 Gloves ... Garters Work Baskets ... ray! .63 Belts ...... Underwe: Auto Lunch Cases. . to $41.25 Belt Buckles. .%. Shirts ........ Auto Robes ...... 4 to .63 Cuff Links ...... » Hats and Caps. Auto Trunks ..... 25 to $37.50 Scarf Pins.....,. ¢ Umbrellas .... Safety Razors ..... 75 to $7.50 Cigarette Cases ....-...........$3.7! Canes ....... Sweaters ... to $18.75 Full Dress Sets........$2.63 to $7.13 Trunks . Golf Hose . 25 to SELECT YOUR CHRIST MAS GIFTS NOW WHERE “VALUES TELL” Notice This is a sale for cash and cash only. No charges will be made. C.G RAVE S. Pres. SECOND AVENUE AT SPRING STREET? Shop in the Mornings, Thus Avoiding the Afternoon Rush We take the loss to quick- YOUNG MEN'S WEAR ly turn this merchandise into money.

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