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ics som Hoop Tiff Overtime Pe-| and Knights Annex 33 to 24 LEO H, LASSEN University of Washington Paketball team, picked as one Se trong contenders for Coast | Pa didn't Ket off to a very good ‘ tin their first prac tice | fab ef the season, The Sun/ iam were outfought and out: | {by the Knights of Columbus | the club gym, and the} 33 to 24, after five min-| play. ington team, used to a} game because of the} wise of the Washington m were undoubtedly hand- geet last night on the Casey fs much smalier than % preity hoop layout. guards played doing most of the of- well as defensive work. | Crawford and Jimmy | ed sterling basketball. | should play some sweet) | before the season ix over Ys weakness last night) forward berths. Evan good at times, but Leo didn’t show much, and ty the K. of C. con nie” Sielk, the lanky center, covered like a the game. Sielk got goal. held a lead at the end half, at 15 to 8, due to ge scoring by Crawford. tied it up, however, whistle, and the teams 21 to 21, Stan Riddle, shooter, came within an the game just before J when 4 foul shot played the rim, and finally rotied | ( | ! ran wild in the over: Riddle and McAteer Davidson (10) Bonney (6) Moriarity + Riddle (9) a. Myers (2) ‘Washington——Froude for . for Froude; Peters i Belik for Peers: Fry (2) for! ® Frankland for Crawford Lewis. Me of Columbus—MoAteer (4) for Davidson for McAteer; lest rumor concerning the candidates for that Pusa- ‘grid battle is that lowa has Invited officially and has just decided to up and come. niversity of lifornia is get- disgusted over failure to get a ible opponent, and reports from outh say that if no representa. tern team wants the date, of the Pullman-U. S$. C.| yy be invited, altho both of have been outclassed by this season. S 3 SONS Athletic club will hoid | amnual father and son ban- iy evening in honor of . Briee Taylor and rs, Seattle's three col- ll stars. The speakers A. Reid, principal of the high school, Judge Jere- and Johnny Prim. me will be toastmaster. will be held at the So- club, 23rd ave. and | IRCUIT DEAD » president of the ¥ onal league, said yes MB Tacoma that the league mate in 1922. A league | elubs cannot furnish a face for the pennant, | bs demanded by the ae bigh for Class B base. said. IB TO LEAD ¥IGERS TEAM M Raub, star tackle of the hall team, has been of next year's foot- I “aged his own choice Will choose A DAYTON TIME You are about to do for his © hristmas ‘ 5 Fulded by the fl ie really know, ORY YEAARANTER " and Maras that will Street CLES, TOO! He's not very big, only evil six feet seven inches and weighs but a mere 210 pounds. Yea, brother, we’ re referr the grid warrior all rarin’ to go in the accompanying picture. McMahan, giant Penn State tackle, one of the Nittany Lions that Washington must contend with urday. Consider the 1922 Bill Galea May Be Brought Back to School; William “ fo'heat bine: Is a Whale of a Tackle; Frosh to Add Strong Men} |.\ 1 wmoy went atead unt waved Dodgers to Lose Four Letter Men BY HAROLD MARQU ASHINGTON will lose four letter men at the end oi the present football season, put will gain from the) Me-| frosh and other sources far more players of varsity caliber.|1 play now is the same game that} Captain Ray Eckmann will be missed more than any |™¥ father t Eck has starred for three years other man on the team. and has been a varsity track man as well. _ EAST RUMOR work in the backfield as well as his inspirational leadership | | has made him the idol of the squad and fans. Eckmann| has been the most consistent player this year, only leaving the game during the Califor-| nia battle. } George Rogge will not be back! with the Sun Dodgers next fall Rogge played second-string end last year and shifted to guard under Bagshaw, where he made an out tanding player. George lacks some weight for a first-class lineman, but | makes up for it in Gght and «peea. Zeke Clarke, giant tackle, is the other lineman to leave the squad. | | Clarke is completing his third year of football and has been one of the mainstays of the team. He is a crew | man also. | Glen Galligan fs playing his first | season of college football, and has| more than made good. He ix the! lightest man on the squad, with the! possible exception of Eckmann, but has held down an end position more satisfactorily than any other con-| terider for the place. Galligan ts clever and fast on the field, and lacks | only the size to become a star wing man, | While Bagshaw loses the players! named, he will have on his squad} many more that will build up the Sun Dodger ranks to pre-war class. Ef. | forts are being made to get Bill! Grimm, former star tackle, to return; to college. Grim was all-Coast tackie | and would make a wonderful running | mate for Ingram next year. Jimmy | Bryan may be able to take part in| tackles, Ingram and Grimm; guards, football! next season, and his weight and fight would be welcome either on | the line or in the backfield. Elbert Harper missed the present football season on account of taking the trip to Japan with the baseball club, but will be available for 1922. From the frosh class a wealth of | material will return to gladden the hearts of the varsity coaches, | That lack of weight has been a de- cisive factor Against ghe Sun Dodgers ATTLE How Jake Schaefer | Won Title New Cue King Tells Story | of His Great Victory | Over Hoppe | ing to He’s “Tiny” at the Stadium Sat- | BY JACOB SCHAEFER, JR. | HAVE always by eas comes to him who leved in the the ory that suc ily works | waity and works—espec | For almost 12 y ‘or wince the | billiard |red from my father to Hoppe championship was transfer I have |been waiting, practicing constantly and working to get the title back to our—the Scha r~ family | | But playing at billiards, that playing at them well and proficient: | jy, is unlike anything else in the | |world that 1 can think of The expert billiard player, or the [player who aspires to become expert | t the game, in my @#timation can/ never acquire sufficient skill thru {his own endeavor, Primarily he! {must have been born with the trait | lof the ev and the “stroke.” ' the ‘of ex | | In other words, billiards |mediocre game but the mame |perts, is an inherited faculty, It re Jquires vision for strategy, courage |for rebuff and great nerve reserve My father was cham |umtil 1909 when he played tournament with Willi Hoppe himself is a marvelous o ponent. He has every bit of tech: | nique and prodigious mastery of the | game's fine points and detail, | But I had made up my mind to defeat him. For hours and hours| before the Chicago tournament be e | gan, and which L knew offered to me, the chance I had been seeking, I practiced to win, | ‘That was where I had the better of Hoppe. He was merely defending {his title, I had told myself that 1} not on for yearn his last | Hoppe. | |for all that was in me. HIS | STY My gnme {# to play from the ends and not from the center of the table. 1 use @ 19%-ounce cue, The game ught me when I was a/ ere boy 12, and he had to boost me up to the board for some of the | His brilliant | shots ‘arlous theories, new ways to |play, have been suggested to me from time to time, but I still atick | |to the eld way my father taught me. It was the ge brought him succes# and the | pionship, | ‘Thru all the years of failure T had jwupreme faith that it would do the | same for me. “Stick to your bush,” used to tell me. By that I should keep jaying a I had started my game. | Coupled with hard work and the} patience to wait, L have found the & good one. I am now the champion. Big Colleges Quit Smaller Grid Masters “If you beat us, we will take you off our schedule.” That seoms to be the slogan of some { the major colleges in the st. For two years Boston College, coached by Major Frank |) Cavanaugh, trimmed Yale in a moat decisive manner. Yale had haped to beat Boeton in the sec ond meeting and then drop it from the schedule. Failing, the | Blue dropped Cavanaugh’s team || a : | anyway = Notre Dame ts experiencing 2| the same treatment this year. || | cd / For years Notre Dame has played the Army and won most of the Captain Bradiey, of Motor Ve- jonday, and contests. This year the Army thought it had a good team, but his mischievous pupils came to tife and won three games, e he played and it cham my father Notre Dame won 2% to 0. Now comes the news that West Point has dropped Notre Dame. this year is generally recognized, This lack will be largely overcome next fall, and the beef will be up to general college standards. A tentative lineup named at thix time ig likely to change a dozen times during the coming season, but fans] would like to see Washington start the season in about this order: Ends, Wiison and Cole, Irvine or | | Westrom, from the frosh squad, Lowrie encour Superintendent J. ¥. * teams from struction Wire chiet P Charley Grant, ro Vehicles, was absent, and Grant had @ good evening. unier, pet finn of) for Motor | consequently It is rumored that Ed Herr, of the Canstruction, will hereafter provide his own pin boy, one with no legs to kick the pins or. as pinch hitter turned in 186, Léon Hill Maintenance, Bryan and Hobi or Kuhn, giant] | frosh lineman; center, Walters, frosh | | star; quarter, Hall or Sherman; half. backs, Green and Hay, Beck, Dailey or Hanley, from the frosh; fullback, | Quass or Harper, or Petrie, giant | freshman. In addition to these Bagshaw will have at hand the ance of his present squad and all the promising yearlings who recently completed a highly successful season. the gallery he second game, dhe went wild with 16 and 176 Joe Twintn accomptice of 7 oo, | Nhe represent the possibilities, | Telephony.” bal. asonen George Prowne, star of the Maintenance squad, watched his average shrink like & 60-cent flannel shirt in an Oregon mist, while he perpetrated a total of 437 of Spokane, was an Transmission team, layground of 17th Team Enters _ || Star Cage Loop; Need One Quintet ND still they come! The Broadway Meteors have filed an entry in The Star Junior Basketball league, and altho the entries cloned last week effort will be made to find a Place in the league for them. This makes 17 teams entered, | There is now room for one more team to make an even number of clubs. Any junior cage squad still wishing to enter should get in touch with the sporting editor of || The Star at once. | A definite announcement re. garding floors will be made at the || meeting of the managers at The Star office next Wednenday. Prospects are bright for use of a downtown floor twice a week If any team now listed doean’t plan to go thru with their league plans, they should let The Star know immediately. EDDIE AND ABE ARE FALL GUYS! Bvery time the dope is upset, even | in football, the guys on the short end} of the betting just automatically look crosseyed at Eddie Cleotte and Abe Attell. jchanges that will be allowed for the | season. |to finish the season for each club. |Juntor managers should check up on itheir lists as the complete registra \Wshed during the next week in The | week in which to make changes. | booked for Sunday with the following | schedule: LAST JUNIOR _ SOCCER LIST- DUE FRIDAY UNIOR soccer registrations due at The Star Friday last The Installation Office sprung a wur- prise by taking three straight from the Construction team. Lewis Watts, famous for hie blond marcel, is a new recruit on the Com- struction Office team, Four splits, plus blows, equals 11 of the Division Plant a cherry, plus two CHEE Nelson, skipper Office hounds. are the stered for | The Sunday's game 15 men re must be the 15 men After Jack Kin) skinned of Division Plant, is to be Durage’s Repeatermen broke the CITY LEAGUERS BOWL TONIGHT | After a week's lay-off to do justice to Thanksgiving, the City league bowlers will swing into action to night with the following schedule: Rube's Cafe vs. Brooks; Lindgren’s va. Alderwood Manor; Compton-Fallis vs, Boldt's; Hikes No, 92 vs. Drux- man’s; Palo Cigars vs, King d’Oros; Hatton-Oliver vs. Rippe's Cafe, NEBRASKA WINS GRID LAURELS Nebraska, which surprised the football world by defeating the pow erful Pittsburg team, has annexed the Missouri Valley Conference championship, | 222 in the Ia was the Ja mmercials back tion list of each team pub: Star and the teams must finish the season with the players listed then Senior teams are allowed one more | list of is The games regular SENIOR DIVISION Postoftice vs. West Seattle at Ht 1 Keferee—Bob Lemon. s Haas-Bokarte at at ip. Referee the m. Boeing Aircraft upper Woodland park at 2:45 George Hoofling JUNIOR GAMES Allen Athietic association va. Falcon A. ©. at lower Woodland park at 1 p. m. Roferee—Johanie Heeke. Rallard Jul Cowan Cigar Co. Referee—-Bily Waller. South Park vs. Loule's French Cleaners wt Routh Park at J p.m cres—Fred Douglas Ren Paris Billiards va Park at Walla Walla at L p.m, —Billy Bioomen. club at p.m Referee Dry Ret Washington Retere Killinger a | | at tackle STAR | Rumble of Big League Deals Is Heard NUMBER of big deals)satisfied for several years, | and the} may be shifted. St. Louis may be made in major leagues before the! . pitchers, and have jopening of next season, Here Stock atid Outfielder are just a few of the players) Miller to offer in trade. needed by different clubs. j Cincinnati must get a new! both |third baseman. Heinie Groh|ers but have only can be used in a trade. Ed)offer in return. Rousch, who has been dis- | The New York _ Yankees Jack cash to Babe Ruth Will Ask for $85, 000 Pay Is Named Star Man Penn State Quarter! Picked for All - Star Berth by Billy Evans BY SEABURN BROW N LE GER bark signals for Hugo Bezdek's Penn State Lions at the ste dium Saturday, has been picked | for All-Eastern | quarterback — by Billy Evans, > The Star's B i ern sporting ex pert | Fans Who have seen the Penn field | general in action at the practice ses: | sions agree with Evans that the diminutive quarter is one of the) greatest, if not the greatest, ever seen on a Seattle gridiron. Harvard is given the biggest rep-| resentation, with three men—Owen at full, Macomber at end and Brown | on the mythical eleven, | YALE PLACES: TWO Yale wing two powitions ting a tackle berth, and the great Aldrich, undoubtedly one of est hacks the game has pro. d this season, holding down a position at half With Snively at end and Keck at Player Snively Into Brown Stein Carney Keck Macomber Killinger .. Aldrich Davies Owen What iB failed to produce anything new in the way present football season h of unusual plays. the standpoint of none of the coache anything startling. That goes for the West and reports from the East bear out the assertion. West ern using some shift |piays that Eastern mentors declare illegal The using @ inventive genius, has produced coaches are Into get Pitter sh ig team has rt forward pass year from the player about jtackled. In some quarters this is being heralded ax a new bit of been to be nationals need pitcher. ‘and The Chicago Nationals need \ Quarterback . Halfback. . - Halfback. . . Fullback From | | against this | American left-handed teams have Cleveland need a_ star Both Milton plenty of trading material. Detroit needs a shortstop second baseman. badly ay be willing to sacrifice infielders and outfield- Bobby Veach in a trade. Pittsburg, because of trou- ble, alleged to have deveiop- ed in the closing stages of Billy | Evans Picks Stars Names All- Seen Tose Position ,End. College - Princeton «++. Yale - Harvard . Pittsburg Annapolis ....+Princeton Harvard Penn State . Pittsburg Harvard — | Will ask for Few New Plays in Football the ball, who, when tackled, simply tosses the ball to the player who is uncovered. Pittsburg worked this play successfully five ti in the game with Syracuse, once touchdown, Centre received much praise for a shift play that it used euccessfully Harvard, Reports have it that the Centre play was simply a modified Colgate spread. It is a| spread formation from which teams having a triple threat can use the pass, running attack or kick to equal advantage. To stop the ehift, the opposition must loosen its de fense, which very often proves fatal. for al hurling © tackle, Princeton brings the total of Big Three representatives to seven, | Both men played great football for the Tigers, Snively’s work against| Y id Harvard marking him for special mention Navy Goat landed one berth on Evann’ squat, guard. Carney was a unit in one of the greatest lines ever developed in Kastern football, Only 13 points w driven thru the Annapolis forwards | in the entire season, ry IES T HALE v piteene whose holding of Penn that he meant | State to a tie, lent a brilliant finish. | ing touch to a rather drab early-sea. son record, have two men, Davies the East squad, is the consensus of tively, Evans’ idea of an All-Eastern team sharp local criticiem. le, Harvard and Princeton hardiy | deserve seven places on the cream of | the t squad is the consensus of | | opinion. The great work of Kaw, Cornell back, and MacCollum, Penn State end, could hardly be overlooked | in such an exclusive grid selection. Capt. Jim Robertson, of Dart mouth, probably was not considered because injuries have kept him from playing most of the season. LOP-SIDED — SCORES ON PIN ALLEYS, 1.EAN sweeps were on the alleys last American Express, Barton & Co., Electrie No. 1, Electric No. 2 and the Union Oil bowlers. the winners came thru by the usual two-out-of-three system, Totals American Ry. Bx. Seattle Greeters chalked up night by the 16 Skookum Barton & Co Sunset Electric Co Electric No. 1 Lumbermen . Puekett Co. Electric Mapleine No. 2 Rion Marehe . Zerolenes PENN U NEEDS CENTRE SYSTEM stern critics are cruelly suggest. rhe that if there is any benefit to a football team in praying it's about time for Coach Heisman of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania to pass out the Bibles. JACK ADMITS HE IS THERE Jack Johnson still maintains he can lick anybody, from Jack Demp- sey down to Johnny Buff, and is lenges broadcast. Jack didn't learn to throw the buil in Spain for nothing. CENTRE SQUAD TO COME WEST Centre college has accepted a foot. ball date with a Pacific coast team,|! as yet unnamed, to be played in San Diego December 26, according to a wire from the Southern city. IOWA TO LOSE STAR GRIDDERS Howard Jones will lose four of his stars at Iowa— Slater, his great tackle; Belding, star end, and the Devine brothers, placing Carney at | The rest of | 2 | to book games away strategy onthe part of the resource: | ful nn Warner. Unless we ar mistaken, Warner originated such @/ advantage in the game with Penn pass years ago and then discarded| state, It ix maid the Georgia shift | it, only to revive it during the pres | is not very effective unless, it is off ent season, with a running start. Southern of. In working the delayed pans, | ficialy, it seems, have overlooked certain player keeps just ahead of|this feature in passing on the play. jthe man carrying the ball, and|‘The very first time it was creates the impression that his sole aieainst Penn, the Southerners drew purpose in to make interference for|a penalty, The action of the offi the runner, Usually he is not|cials was a severe blow to Georgia, given much consideration, no one|which had been using the play in even taking the precaution to put|that manner. That opening penalty [him out of the play. The defense! really spelled defeat for the South: |!*_maxéed on the player carrying | erners —Billy Evans JONES HAS IT OVER SMITH? “Tad Jones had a big year in the East. His brother Howard went equally well in the West. Since the Georgia Tech, failed to use its Pro Grid | |nence this year, we are glad to note on ane | that a historic name like Jones is to | supplant it.”—Eastern exchange. | To be suré, there is a crude gink | Smiths are not enjoying much promi: | | Interest Dies Out in Sport in Middle West; His-| tory of Sport 1E popularity football seems ne | A year or two ago It looked as if the professional game was sure to so big. A reaction, however, has jset in, which makes it seem that the public has soured on the pro- fessional “grid” game In Cleveland, where the game | went big for a time, interest seems to have died out to a great extent In fact the crowds dropped off so badly that the Cleveland manage ment found it far more profitable from home on a straight guarantee, than to gam ble with the weather and the en thusiarm of the fans. It is beginning to look as if foot | ball was truly the school and col lege game, Spirit is what makes | the game so attractive from the col Jege standpoint. That spirit is en- tirely lacking in professional games This despite the fact that practically all the leading pro teams are com posed almost entirely of former col lege stars, many of them All-Ameri. can selections. Whalebone set of Teetn A number of the former stars who | 88 Crowns have turned “pro” seem to have |8% Brldwework $2 Amalgam F' forgotten all about the old college |apirit. Instead of playing to the ork Kicenubeah takenae che Ree |limit of their enduran they save |ing and get teeth same day. Exami- | themselves at every opportunity, jon and advice free. jand take few if any chances. jonly natural that any sport in | which there is a decided lack of ef- |fort and interest by those taking | part, should sooner or later suff as a result, That tells the sto of professional football. Cornell as declined the invitation California in the annual New | Year's Day East-West grid tiff, Gil named Smith who coaches a Tittle) school somewhere in the wilds of the | Pacific Coast; but, of course, those minor schools really cawn't be rated | with Yale or lowa, where the science of football is really comprehended. Yale was actually forced to decline an invitation to play the impertinent fellows! to be on the! | i of professional! | | 1 THEY SAY THAT— “Battling” Hector doesn’t more. Real Painless any In order to introduce our (whalebone) | plate, lightest an ong. does not cover he roof mouth; you can bite corn off cob; guaranteed 15 years. u fomers, who have tested our work. When coming to our office. be aur you are in the right place. Bring tnis ad with you, Cut-Rate | of |much advertised shift to any great | used | !the 1921 race, is said to be ready for a house cleaning. The@sPirates have plenty of | traing material. St. Louis Browns need a seasoned second baseman to {round out the team. All the other clubs need strengthening, but have little to offer in the way of trad- ‘ing materia Will Ask All Clubs for Coin Bambino Figures on Get- ting Coin While Getting is Good; Ruth Talks BY BILLY EVANS ate THOUSAND dollars from the New York Americans and $5,000 trom every other club in the A ican league hat is the sa the ry that Babe Ruth season of 1922. I {have Babe's word for it. | Ruth had @ sliding contract with the New York American deague club last year, His actual salary was | $20,000. He received a bonus for his home-run record, which, perhaps car- ried the figure to $35,000, ! Ruth's contract with the American j league expired at the close of the | 1921 season, When he confers with | the New York club, he intends to ask a combined salary that will total $85,- | 000, which is $10,000 in advance of | What the president of thé United States receives, | SOMETHL NEW This will be the first time that a player has demanded a salary from jthe other clubs in the league, to which he is in no way affiliated, other | than being a member of the same or- | ganization. | “I broke 1920 wise | ords, the home-run records In and 1921," says Ruth, “Like- I broke a lot of attendance ree- Fifty-nine home are a large flock, I am going to be mighty aby if I break that mark in 1922. | If 1 don’t break it, I am going to | fade out of the picture, “Lam a big card right now; the moment I quit smacking those old home runs, every one js going to fdr- get all about me, runs ‘The time to get the dough is to get it while the getting is good. If I can't get it now, I never will be able to come thru. “I feel that I am an asset at the gate of every club in the league; that is why I feel the burden of my sal- ary should be divided.” | WASHINGTON’S LINE TOO WEAK Baggy spilled a hatful of real wis- dom in his little spiel at the Hi-Y banquet Tuesday evening. “Any dub can carry the ball; the real basis of 4 good team is a strong line. I have some good backfield men, but we won't have a strong football team at the university until I get @ line,’ the coach said, TIGER MAT MEN BOOKED PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 24.— Prfmceton University wrestlers will engage in seven dual meets, begin- ning with Brooklyn Polytechnic at Brooklyn, December 10. The Army wrestlers will be tackled January 21 at West Point. Boat Schedules =—-SAVE MONEY= Travel by steamer TACOMA few hgh Dg ty AS. ey Gpectal’ Sun. Trip. 7 ‘ite fr One Ticket VICTOR PorRT ANGELES DAILY aT (Doe: trip 1 BELLINGHAM - ANACC PORT TOWNSEND RAIL COM ND Mitt PORT HOOD CANAL POINTS NEAH BAY & Way PortTs Dobie has long been called the nny Scot.” “Canny” is right OHI Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY ST. Opposite Fraser-Vaterson Co, PUGET SOUND NAV IGAT 1ONn. C SECT Si T= GLADLY TYLISH CLOTHES MEN_& WOMEN EASY PAYMENTS OdMting a. : ND AVE 209UNION Corner Pike and Minor Ave, sa eg ees nen