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JOHNNY BUFF ‘California Figures to Beat “W” Gridders, But Bears Face Fight | Coast Champions Have Bi e Week and Fight Mey este ray in day; Yale and Princeton Weight; Varsity Fooled Stanford Last Results; Oregon Aggies vs. Washington State To- et Together Tomorrow LEO H. LASSEN ILE California's “wonder team” is ex i pected to romp away with the pine with Washington, at Berkeley, tomorrow afternoon, the Golden Bears n't want to take the game too lightly, if the Sun Dodgers show the same amount of fight that Stanford did in that memorable battle with Stan- ford last week. — Dodgers are facing the same handicap that Stanford faced last week, & long ride on the rattlers. This usually takes heavy toll of the condition of the men. . Ww is going into the game under the big handicap of their ROT rai outweighed by many pounds per man. Last week the Stan- catek sate a edge, but Washington fought them off of their “The Dodger line is going More Football Guesses have a different time with e Golden Bear forwards. There isn't a forward line in the country that plays any Last week The Star picked four winners out of nine Stronger, or better together. Ber-|| starters in the football games booked for November 5. Picking winners on the gridiron is like walking on the w. k. banana peeling, it’s slippery business. But we're game. Here's the guesses for this week: California 21, Whee ag 0. Cornell 35, Springfield 0. Oregon Aggies 14, Washington State 7. Yale 44, Princeton 3. rgia Tech 7, Georgetown 0. Harvard 21, Brown 0. Chicago 21, Illinois 0. Towa 28, Indiana 7. Notre Dame 35, Haskell Indians 0. Penn State 7, Navy 7. Washington and Jefferson 14, Pittsburg 7. Wisconsin 21, Michigan 0, Ohio State 28, ue 0. Dartmouth 14, Pennsylvania 0, Syracuse 14, Colgate 0. Stanford 35, Nevada 0. Dartmouth 21, Pennsylvania 0. Sulphur Springs potnt to Chinese pheasants, quail ly i i while epland being tekem tn that im~ oy Hy hd that It contines mediate vicinity. Ly wide — showing le getting geod lake is eapeciaily good for Chinese a2 nd whe te aot. ite tect thas janis, with very litte posted land. Suipe the birds Sanaa shooting te good on the south cs, Bred he ecusee = pregressce. ith ducks fair durme the heavier found in Mallards, buttervaile and teal are Cound on the lake, The mallards are local birds and are very hard to get Bear enough to shoot at @ ttmmt the jake over spent Bun- day om the inks and brought back both quail and Chinese pi at. Ed Grae both birds hease: ham reported the limit om which holds their season last week end oth. Birds aplenty are to u ‘ef Seattle im the districts cast | tinues to furnish ox for both the gett ciub reed ever inte trout 4 aeimon. Troiling t# the prin- the Teit and Snequsimie valleys. | cipal form of fishing with many limit ‘The country around Hollyweed has | catches being made Hoats will be found been found eapecially geod for Chi- | at Kenmore. nese pheacente, South of the city re- a, porte have come to Fiper & Tate ef | Prom the outside reports esmes ene geod hunting cast aad weet of Kent |e, piper @ Taft from Ben Butterworth, Gnd farther down the White River | 0, [pT 4 Tat turned trom stip to valley. Big Lake, in Skagit county, Ben says the trout are taking both fy and spoon, the fishing being the best this season, e' with many limit catehes reported. Iowa Grid Captain Works — His Way Thru University arom Ia. Nov. 11—An “Iowayjof an upperciassman and has never jad” from Oklahoma has Wy fafied in a course he has undertaken. getting the big share of credit His work is on « par with most the Mid-West in football the last two | students who carry no outside activ- ity, while he not only competes in athletics thruout the year, but ts making his way thru coliege in addi- tion, Selling programs, managing .|the sale of sweets and popcorn at athletic contests, and arranging for the sale of team pictures furnish Wallace with his expense money for |four years of college training. He wants to be a “dirt farmer” when thru college. He spends his summer months on a claim in Col- orado, “proving up” the required time for the government, and chop- ping trees to build up a strong physique. A popular student with classmates, a college man who studies when study is needed, a man who com- mands the respect and admiration of all his friends thru his quiet, open hearted manner when off the football field or mat, but who can put a “punch” Into his classmates that wins games for sis school—that is the 178 pounds of manhood known nationwide as “Polly.” 3 i da : i hard fighter. “Polly” Wallace, who took acne field failed to come up to the coach's “expectations in the last games. | ROCKY KANSAS FIGHTS NOV. 21 __ MILWAUKEE, Nov. 11.—Rocky Kansas and Johnny Mendelsohn, tweights, will meet here in a bout November 21. a center, and to cap the list was placed on Eckersall’s All-American | eleven tn the same capacity, is cap- tain of the Iowa State football team this fall at Ames, Iowa, His playing early this season was a wonder to spectators of the games in which he participated. Wallace has been termed @ “rov- ing’ center. He has been described ag having an uncanny sense of see- ing where a play was going, and being there to stop tt. To show the strength of Wallace's ability to pt fight into the Cy- clones, it be pointed out that hig team has lost the last three games in the valley race because, it lmay be safely said, Wallace was not lin that game enough to carry his \team thru for a victory and to hold \them until the game was over. ‘Wallace carries the heavy schedule I wish to enter the..-....- Name Team) in The Star Junior Basketball league. BABE MUST HAVE HIS LITTLE JOKE Babe Ruth hag worked a little hu mor on Judge Landis into his lines on his vaudeville tour, according to a New York dispatch, ar Junior Cage Entry 5 (Name District) Our team is from the...... MARCEE DE LUXE Italian Briar It fs pleasing to the eye and the purse and is most pleasant to the Smoker. Spring Cigar Co., Inc. 707 First Avenue 910 Second Avenne 1406 Fourth Avenes 418 Pike Street Wee cewe cs cewcewme sere es eesens me sessesssoeoees (Manager) mee ne mamnnceceseses ss ssersermes eres cesoesoes (Address) proses seas cncs emcees rs secs ceenemcecscecomenss (Phone) NOTE—Teams represented et The Star Wednesday night ée not need to fill out this blank. epecial report coming tn to Piper & Taft | 7" THE SEATT DEFEATS JACK SHARK Buff Wins Parisian in Bout for Bantie Title Sharkey Outfights Cham- pion in Early Rounds; Buff Finishes Strong NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—After pil ing up a lead in the earty sessions, Jack Sharkey lost the judge's de- cision to Johnny Buff, champion, in ® 1$round battle for the bantam title, The champion wns staggered by Sharkey’s heavy punching until the 12th round, when he cut loose with an attack the challenger could not fathom. Buff's condition stood him tn good stead; he recuperated quickly from the punishment of Sharkey’s victous attack in the early periods, Buff won six of the 15 rounds, and four were even. Bert Colima won the decision over George Shade 1 a preliminary. Hoth are Pacific Coast boys. SLOW CAMERA ILLUSTRATES PUGS’ SKILL What happens when the ¢x ponents of “the manly art of self. defense” mix it fast and furiously? Mebbe you think you know. Just the mime there are a few things the keenest eye minses, an ts evidenced by the slow motion pictures at the Coliseum theatre of young Earl France, Pacific Coast lehtwotght champion, and Billy McCann, light weight champion of Ohio. And when an uppercut tands elean on the other fellow’s jaw—and he's hooked off his balance in “slow mo- tion™——-well, it's just a bit more graphic than the fight fan usually eiimpnea, FEMININE SHOTS NEW YORK, Nov. 11—National ranking of the first 25 women trap shooters will be made this year for the first time in the history of the basis of averagns at the end of the oar. Two Washington women, Mra. C | A. O'Connor, of Spokane, and Mra, D feminine trap stars, Mat ‘Game Tamed the punishing holds, The “dena _| tured style makes the mat bouts too | Maupome's “victims” have not been | tame, 3RD HALL FOR MARYSVILLE, Cal, Nov. baseball, will make his debut with the San Francisco team next season. HORNSBY LEADS WINTER HITTERS SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11.— Rogers Hornsby, the Cardinal star, is leading Harry Heilman and his bossa, Ty Cobb, in hitting in the Coast Winter league. VANCOUVER TO PLAY STANFORD Stanford university's rugby team will play a three-game series with the Vancouver Rugby Union team, at Vancouver, in December and Janu- ary. ‘The Knights of Columbus basket. ball tossers swampea the Lincoln high school night gym class 46 to 12. The Knights have a strong team and are looking for games, which can be arranged thru W. S. Riddle, of K. C. hall. Real Painless Extraction Free Daily (whalebone) plate, which is the | lightest and strongest plate known, doen not cover mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. net of Teetn All work guaranteed for 15 yea .| | Have impressions taken in the morn. |\ng and get teeth same day. nation and advice free. Exami- Mont of our present patronage recommended by our early custoi ers, whose work. is still givi |good satisfaction. Ask our ce |tomers, who have tested our wo: When coming to our office, be you are in the right place. Bring this ad with you, Cut-Rate OHIO Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Frai 80! Y ash ARE RECOGNIZED sport. The ratings will be on the BUT PERHAPS HIS NAME IS DENNIS WINNIPEG, Nov. 11.—Jack Demp-| iowa, and had lived happily with lub for $160,000 to meet an unknown boxer here next summer, in N. Y. Arenas NEW YORK, Nov, 11.—The state|tion matches at the Palace billiard wrestling comminsion may rescind ts | parlors, 912% Ist ave. at $30 p. m., recent regulation barring many of|on Friday, Nov. 11. and on Saturday, | P. C. LEAGUE 1 William Hall, third member of the |Parently unconcerned over the out- Hall family to break into organized |come of his appeal to the Mexican In order to introduce our new) the roof of the| DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES ) BICYCLES LE STAR EY IN BANTAM TITLE GO. PAGE 21 Bowlers Head List Hatton-Oliver and Rippe’s| Cafe Take Three Games in a Row The top of the heap tn the City | Bowling league’is still decorated by | | the Parisian Chocolates, They won two out of three trom the King @'Oros, while the KE. N. Brooks team | took a fall out of the Palo Cigars to the tune of three straight. The Lindgren Footfittern and | Rube's Cafe were beaten three in a row, respectively, by HattonOliver and Rippe’s Cafe, and Compton and Falles hodked the Alderwood Manor | boys two out of the proverbial three. 9085 Footfitters .... 958% Hatton Oliver .1,019 Druxmang .... 974 SEAL PILOT JOB WANTED BY NIEHOFF managing virus is burning the veins of Bert Niehoff, utility infielder of the Angles this season, who ts bending every effort to se cure the vacant managership of the San Franciseo club for the 1922 season. Nichoff ts one of a host of appll- canta for the job, which Charley Gra- ham vacated at the close of the 1821 | pennant race. | Posseased with playing abflity and | Daseball brains, Niehoff stands out | among the flock of would-be man- agers, and his experience will stand | him in good stead when the Seal di | rectors get together to chat on the) mpibject, JUDGE WILL BE JACK’S REFEREE NEW YORK, Nov. 11—Jack| Dempsey, world's heavyweight cham. | Coolidge of Colfax are Washington's | Pion, was sued In supreme court yes | terday for $250,000, by Albert Seigel, vaudeville pianist and song writer, | for alenation of affections of his wife, Bee Palmer, vaudevilie dancer, | The plaintiff said he had~ married | the dancer last March in Davenport, | en TO PLAY LOCALS Pierre Maupome, recognized as the beat “shot-maker” of the three-cush- fon billiard game, will play exhibi- | the 12th, at 2:30 and 8:30 p. m.) named. Admission will be free. COFFROTH NAGS RARIN’ TO GO SAN DIEGO, Cal. Nov. 11—Ap- supreme court regarding possession | of the Tijuana race tract, James W. Coffroth, president of the Lower! California Jockey ¢lub, was here| ‘Thursday preparing for winter meet, Which opens on Thankagiving day, WELL, IT’S NOT A 6-DAY SPASM} NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—A series of 24-hour Dicycle races will begin next Wednesday at Madison Square Gar- den. Redness of the Red sea is due to masses of certain kind of seaweed. The Coal of No Regrets! LUMP COAL $10.50 Per Ton EGG NUT $9.50 Per Ton LARGE LUMP $11.00 Per Ton Just the coal for furnace, stove and fireplace. Lowest in ash, Delivered anywhere in Seattle, Extra for carrying, Brier Hill Coal Co. Bankers at 533 Terry Ave. N. Phone Capitol 4315. 221-Third COR UNIVE 1 Ave H CH CYCLE CO. this Lackstrom Dechman (144)... Prep Grid Elevens to Do Battle Broadway vs. Ballard To- day, With Lincoln and West Seattle Tomorrow ALLARD and Broadway were playing the game that was ex pected to go a long ways towards deciding championship for the season this af ternoon at Denny field. The kickoff was set for 3:20, the .prep football cellar ‘The Tigers have not won a game ear, loning by a 14 to 0 eount to Queen Anne, West Seattle and Franklin in turn, It is the first time in the history of the Pine st school that a Tiger team has lost three games in a row. Rallard hasn't won a game efther, 9 |but the Shingleweavers have a better record, as they lost to Queen Anne, 10 to 3, and then played scoreless tie Roldt’s ... 921 941 975-—2,837 | ames with both Lincoln and Frank King @Ore ...1,072 975 965—2,012 lin, Palo Cigars ... 908 887 953-—2,748| The teams were expected to line 1. N. Brooks.. 947 921 979—2,847|up as follows this afternoon: Rippe's Cafe 2. 903 967 944—2,804] manara Nroatway Rube’s Cafe .. 873 956 #86—2,716 | ve (len) 2M. .Wragefieid (154) Alderw'd Man'r 952 929 §87—2,768 efit be 4 aie (164) Compton & Falls 924 997 996—2,927| Masterson (147). Garber (142) Erickwon (146) “HL. Linder (142) FB. ...., Meister (160) Wert Seattle is going up against a hard fight tomorrow afternoon, when they face the rejuvinated Lin- coln eleven tomorrow afternoon. The (138), Day (145), Moldephour (145). SHAKEUP DUE ON! PITTSBURG TEAM PITTSBURG, Nov. 11.—Reports are rife that Schmidt, Zinn, Whitted, Barnhardt and Tierney are to be re in a general Pirate house cleaning this winter. Inefficiency land lack of harmony on the team believed responsible for the change. A trade with St. Louis for Milton Stock ts under consideration. 1 leaned GIBBONS TO TRY ENGLISH RINGS, | NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—Mike Gib bons will sail for England soon, where he is matched to fight 20 rounds with Ted Lewis, middiewetght | champion of Europa, Gibbons shad-| ed Lewis several years ago, in Mad! fsoh Squar Garden, in the only bout jin which the two have met. |kigkoff is set for 230 p, ra The In |dians will go inte the game without the services of Bob Forestor, their stellar fullback, who ts out of the game with injured foot | The Lincoln team, greatly strengthened by the addition of Dean |Royle, Hutchinson and Bruce, will be favored to win. ‘The probable Uneups follow: Lines E.R. ...Cutting (155) ‘TR, Alexander (156) | MeNaught Stengel (1 | smith (21 WHutchingon (196) Ronamy. ( Krueger 482) Garley (16 Bhidier M64) Keele (1 Meloud (146) Shiager (165) » Parley (167) Bypher (164) J Boyle (145) Hinkle (149) | Byers (142)... -.1.ILR MeCuteheon (142) |Raiawin G65). RL ine Benmits (170), -...7.B Brace i7@ | " dubetitutes—Weat Seattle, Rather (155 Dean (175), Bloxam (150), MoNef (145), Rockey (142), Lincoln, McMullen (180), Bchoettier (158), Atwater (160), Kwaptl (160), Otto Yamaoka (137), Johnson MEXICAN CUEIST, _ “Business Is Good” The Reason: Quality Our business has been built up solely on the basis of QUALITY, SERVICE and the giv- ing of the highest possible value for your money. As a result we have had an un- usually busy fall season. give greater value than ever in, We a SUITS OVERCOATS ©; amd RAINCOATS © that will appeal to men and young men who like to be well dressed at moderate expense. It’s a fact that j not for years have the clothes been of such high qual- : ity as those we aré now showing. The prices are back to “normalcy” and you'll be surprised to find what wonderful values you can obtain. In suits we have the famous “FASHION PARK” and other nationally known makes, the names of which carry a guarantee of superior quality. In overcoats and raincoats the range of selection is enormous, from heavy ulster to lightest raincoat and gabardine—all the finest makes. Overcoats and Raincoats $20 to $60 Suits $25 to $50 Two-Pants Suits $30 to $50 SHANER & WOLFF “Clothes That Are Different” 916 Second Avenue Klepper Makes a Speech Portland Prexy Says Few Words That Prompt the Bull to Get Busy HEN President Strub, of the Sasi Francisco Seals, introduced hig — resolution, at the annual meeting of — the Coast league magnates at Lew . Angeles, the other day, which woul have prohibited the sale ‘of players for delivery to the major leagues tm mid-season, President Bill Klepper, of the Portignd club, announced that the league had no right to legislate 4d againet these deals. pine “Every deal | made while pres i ‘ ident of the Seattle dub last year © strengthened the team, or I would not have made it,” said Klepper. "If 1 can deliver one good player in duly for three good ones, I am legally entitied ‘to do it.” Strub withdrew his resotution. Whether or not the mague has right to vote such a resol writer doesn't know, but if of Herb Brenton in 1920 and of Bill Cunningham during yelir of 1921 helped the Seattle during those races on the field, then Pete. Muldoon ig never noticed Pete wearing shredded wheat evening suite © re able to # 4 a ; af