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“finished fighter. hy hours of football! was enough for Ernie Vick of Michigan to win a place on Walter Camp's All- American eleven. Vick played four years at Mshigan, ong of them under the Students’ Army Training Corps rule. Never once did he have time taken out. Bat tl ing With Cook in. London Ring Future of Gorgeous Georges Is at Stake in| 20-Round Tiff BY SEABURN BROWN ING interest was centered | today =p rps » Georges Car-! pentier,| champion and : urope i n eavyweight title holder, was meeting! George Cook, the Australian The Michigan athletes as- sembled at Ann Arbor on September 15 of last fall, but Vick was not among them Work apart from his col- lege course, kept him from reporting to Coach Yost until two weeks after practice had started. cal school on his arrival. That is a hard course and it was work from morning until night. His final el ss of the day was over at 5 in the evening, which made it too late for him to get into uniform and report for practice, | _Viek enrolled in the medi- Night after night the sub- Fives Loom Washington, Californ “Idaho and Oregon Aggies Look Like Leaders in Conference, With Stanford as Dark Horse _ BY HAROLD MARQUIS HR University of Washington, Oregon Agricultural College, the University the first division at the openi: of California and Idaho are upon} picked as the outstanding contenders in Pacific Coast and London,'» ‘orthwest Conference basketball this season. where Washington State, Wuitman and Stanford are rated below Oregon, ng of the varsity season. Taking into account the uncertainties of pre-season dope, Coast conference. Stanford is weak, but we don’t meet them this season. Regarding Oregon, playing two games with the ‘Sun world’s light’ Coach Hee Edmundson, of Washington, predicts “California heavyweight and O. A. C. will give Washington the hard games in the Idaho is going to be a hard team to beat. fon, center; Bill Gartin and Harry Edwards, guards, Idaho meets Ore fon next week in Eugene, with four veterans on the string of players. blacksmith, for the cham-|Dodgers here Friday and | BEARS LooK pionship of Europe. | Today’s fight was expected to settle a question that has/4 big advantage for Washing-| made the French battler a! man of mystery since his ill-! -fated clash with Jack Demp-| sey—whether or not he was per Manentiy huct by the terrific hat- tering he received from the Utah five ¥etérans the coach has Froude, | thin season around © Mauler. | Conflicting reports have stamped Carpentier as better than ever, and as a broken-spirited, physically-| Jack McAuliffe, | who has written a series of articles on his observations at Carpentier's ning camp, has experienced last minute change of opinion from} his first conclusion that Carpentier was “gene inside” and a has-been. | McAULIFFR | CHANGES MIND | MeAuliffe wired late yestertay| that Carpentier looked the eve of the fight than he did when he was training for Demp-| sey. That's quite a bold statement The Frenchman was certainly “in the pink” last July McAuliffe thought yesterday, ac cording to his wire, that Carpen- tier would kayo Cook in less than/ five rounds. It is certain that both Carpentier! and his manager, Francois Des champs, have taken the Cook match as seriously as any fight! fn George’s long ring career, His future as a pusilist is at stake. | Cook is considered a fairly good trial horse by the best of the eritics who haw watched him go thrv his training paces; but does not class f& candidate for Dempney's crown. He seems to be the sort of a man who is a mark for a top- fotcher, but who can't be beaten any but the best. iS FUTURE AT STAKE Tonight's wire setties the future) ef Georges Carpentier with the American sporting public. A vic tory—and Carpentier will be wel- have a heavy draw-| ing power in any American ring.| A defeat—and Georges wouldn't @raw any more than Young Hector. That Carpentier was winning to} day was the almost universal hope of fight fans in every country but England. His brilliant stand against Dempsey in the round of the “battle of tury,” when he knocked pion from the center of the ring to the ropes with a blow that broke his right hand, and his «mil ing, game acceptance of the bitter disappointment of defeat, has made| him one of the most popumr ring| men of today. come and will second | the cen-| the cham-| i ~ Red Painless Extraction Free Daily In order to introduce our new whalebone) plate, which is the lightest and strongest plate known, does not cover the roof of the you can bite torn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. s1/ All work guaranteed for 15 years, ‘ave impression taken in the mor ing and get teeth same day. Exam- ination and advice free. | Call See Samples of Our —| and Bridge Werk. We Stand the Test of Time Most of our present patronage te | Fecommended by our early custom- ra, whose work is still giving satisfaction. Ask our cuns- ers, who hi tested our work. When conning to our office, be sure ow are in the right place. Bring | ifr] a4 with you. | Dentists | 207 UNIVERSITY gt. Pypesite Vraser-Paterson Ca, junknown quality, § “Dummy, Saturday, Edmundson is si- lent, but indications point to ton over the Webfooters. Edmundson will probably use Capt. Jimmy Bryan and “Windy” Crawford at guards, Heinie Sielk at center and Evan Lewis and Leo Nicholson at forward. Backing these Peters and Frankland, with a string of subs if needed. OREGON LOSES VETERANS Oregon starts the season crippled by the los of three veterans, now with the football team in Hawall H. Latham, Bill Rhinehart and Hal Chapman are the missing etter men, Starting for Oregon against Wash: ington this week will be Mare Tatham, Rot Andre, Don Zimme man, Frank Bellar and Burnett. Latham and Bellar played on the Lemon-Yellow five last year. Oregon trip to Whitman the first of this woek. Oregon Aggies’ hopes are based this season. on Clement Saunders land Dick Stinson, Arthur Ross, Tule Richards and Amory Gill, Hielte, the giant center, is out of the game for some time, but will probably be back in play before Washington tangles with the Aggies: Idaho started the season with worlds of speed, winning 12 of the first 12 practice gaines. Starring for the Vandals are Capt. Dick Fox and Alex Fox, forwards; Oxwald Thomp- California prospects look as bright as last masons, altho Coach Wight loses several of his champion- ship winners.~ Tate, from the frosh, looks good for a forward ponition, with Beam and LeHane as muarde California will play In Seattle Janu- ary 27 and 28 Washington five Is built pt. Jack Felet veterans of last State's and Spud Loomis seanon, Sayers « Schroeder, a forward and guard from the frosh squad, and last year's sub center, Harold Sorenson, comiplete the var- sity quintet Stanford was hard hit when Mills, Righter and Adams were lost to the arsity five. Davies, captain and ‘orward, and Disk Richmond, run ning cuard and Rogers are the only veterans, Phil Neer may play for the Cards Jansen, Cleveland, De Groot and Camptell are other con- tanders better ©f dropped the opening series of the U.S. C. NOT Bart | {stitute center ran thru the|that “Ernie” did not play, verine eleven. only does he understand his|seen since the days of Ger signals with the varsity, On|) more than that number of The Michigan center has| job on the line but he also|many Schultz the days when games were hours during the entire sea played in many hard games,| knows the back field, having rnie” is the captain-elecé scheduled Vick would don his’ son. but has never had one minute | played there in 1919. His for the varsity baseball team) uniform and play the center Vick’s absolute depend- of time taken out. He has quick thinking has turned the| and is considered by many © position ability in ssing the ball,| also never been credited with | tide many times for the Wol-|critics as the best backstop Allowing that there were|coupled with his almost su-|a bad pass to a back field’ verines. in the Western conference. ~ seven conference games on )perhuman defensive play,| man. Coach Yost has expre: In addition to campus active — Michigan's grid schedule in| made him the logical choice nie’ knows football the opinion that Vick the ity, Vick is president of the the fall, it can safely be said, for the position on the Wol-|from beginning to end. Not greatest center the West has | freshman class in the medical [Foyston |Favorites Is Star of | Win Star | Ty Cobb | ....\et.Geine Fest! Need Right” Puck Win) CageTiffs) of Tennis Travie Davis has abandoned his ie | Field Men Blond Wizard Counts Five Collins Cubs, Shaner & | Boston Net Star Has ; plan to invade Eastern rings, and will return to Seattle for a few bouts immediately after his bout at Low Angeles with Gene Cline, for next Tuesds Davis to take on a few of the winted expec bent Northwest welters when he | Frisco, Vernon, Salt | Goals for Seattle in 5-2) Wolff and Ballard Cubs) Ranked in First Ten for sets back, according to the report || and Sacramento in Over Vancouver | Win Easily Ten Times || ho catted off the trip to the Bast || Have Outfield Prok in | bit of a mystery, as the coust | 8 won in the three Star | BY ALEX ©. ROSE PAVORI AT NILES of Boston is the Ty|| weiter champ seemed strong for BY LEO H. LASSEN TH Frank Foys Junior Basketball league games ‘obb of the tennix world. the idea when he left here a few narod 'LLING the ton’s shooting! played at Collins field houve lust For 15 years Cobb has been a top. weeks ago. eye peeled, the night. The Ballard Cubs walloped notcher in the batting records of the Beattie hockey |the Yesler A, C., 29 to 8; Shaner & | American league. | team emipped | Wolff threw the hooks into the As | por 13 years Nat Niles has been | ping fort out of its slump at the Arena last tune of 25 to 7, tubs kept up their hi Juniors to tt and the Collins reckoned as one of the greatest of the American tennis players, ent time, the opening —— _ bn bran, Roark w t seomapees Wash! ‘In 10 of the 13 years he has starred the Coast ti o e o . lon the courts; he has 10 times bee couver seven &| The Ben Paris” Billiards. Dandy punked in the firet 10. re ree to's at the Bakiog comming ame was post. It is @ remarkable record of con n ned bepause loor condition# At | sistency and retent of nearcha: Foyston shot/the Knights of Columbus, due to*a nship form, v4 at Mg pon | all five counters misunderstanding. This game will be od only e e1 | ~ i * @. ‘This s aned by only one other American,| Pye schedule Yor the Jumtor Star for the Seattle | rescheduled next week. the famous William A. Larned. | league games for Sunday was or- club, with Ber. No report was turned in for the) Larned in generally regarded as| teimally issued with reverse English, pra eyg a Sea “fp t — wame, scheduled one of the greatest players of all bell ae e bern re-whed- | stuon ut present. the matt of scoring, Bernie} a he maak c # Bene, er 2) wears Do Wear tates) Ben Faris Billiards va. Ballard, ot Bed, Lake basn’t! sancenes thenting a rt o See ie ‘or = Battery ea hang ¥ |among the first 10 players. He held| yee. Walla, at 2:15, Keferee, | outfielder to replace Gavvy Cra’ hg up three sssists, ra own boys at the Knights of ¢ the nationa) championship on eight Reske. the slugging manager of last Rowe and Jack Walker assisted in |umbus hall in what promises to be different occasions. Larned starred| pany st Uheoie watt, ca eige |Cravath was slow, but the Bees ne other two. jone of the biggest gumes of the from 1892 to 1911 Referee, Billy Bloomen. mins his hitting. Seattle Loox the Jena tn ap rte year, It will start at 7 p.m Niles has never won ,a national] ,,Mowth Park vs. Hawthorne Juniors, Vernon is anxious to get une de teerusee cael no ~ | title, but he has always extended the| George Moetling. = ** |man to replace Stumpy | wes tr thin ehotion tae. Waneceae ee chomptons to the limit, ang beaten |They have obtained “CI PLAY them in many tournaments other). Jim Bond. utility goal keeper of the| Hawkes from the New York ¥; |@cored, Jack Adame goaling from n Went Beattie team, wants to be trans ais Wabeeh ane deta teaae Horee play featured .the Ballard |than the nationals ferred to Woodiand Park. That cant be| He's fast and a fair hitter. He | pcored Gat mtather uneiat thera Purkeg|Cubs-Yesler Way A. C. game, tho| Niles first broke Into the charmed | the Park team bag Jess than|b@ the man for the place, in te thie te “ om DSESSS | latter team playing rough-house most | circle of the “First Ten” in 1908. He] slaned men. Schneider may be made a “ of the time cLoughiin and was placed eighth that year, Since Seo geod this year. j he Sea! n . hington Park’ bi protested thi rian ody rare gr iy Wheaton starred for the winners. |then he hag been fourth on one occa 13 neta be ct inst] Whether or not Buddy Ryan or gil -eapanttinirondlvenapan’) yin ig tag | ee | fifth on another, sixth five play right field for Sacramento tora tat weete, onty to-loae out, bet late Eine — Gabe iti es, eighth ence, ninth once and ts on |ls a question. He's getting along |the Mets profited thia week and |< Yorward... Wheaton [tenth once. sarding the | Years. He had @ good year last Ne hy gee ssniowenltten nla lage | _ ieiand | tet PRESS protest. within « day son, however, and he may be in wtler | " larly again for several the last neanion With Frank Kelly back in harness, | "°#" * ALEX PLANNING pully the Weat Seattle pilot, The game was the cleanest played| here thin year, no penaltios being dished out | “Happy” Holmes and Jack Walker |were in fine form for Beattle, while! Jim Riley played well on the defense, fa position new to him, jwas in a unie, but he didn't get a |chance to play. } Paigns yet. | San Francisco's right fleld jem is still unsolved. Jim ©’ may be shifted to that berth first base. Justin Fitzgerald is other question mark. :: Sam Crawford at Les “Brick” Eldred at Seattle, Dick Cox” at Portland and Dennie Wilte at Oalke A BIG SEASON} tien’t=" Grover Cleveland Alexander, upon whose cunning right wing the Chi-| | cago Cubs are banking to hold them | lup in the National league pennant | Jmarathon thix summer, has already | gone into training in order to reach | HASLEM Roy Rickey | STARS. fat eleven in the field against the Fostetfice vam in their game at cola park The Russ Haslem and John Evans were Sere ; cance, kickoff ie }the big scorers for the Shaner & Nobody in “particutee: starred fo®! wolff team in their game with the 9 canon oR og A a mere ond . m McKinley, of the real veterans roe y all considered as ™ the visitors vonnphords rY y league opens. n injury to thejof Northwest soccer, is pibying « up | for 1922, }IN RACE eraxbreee ae culae ty ood ane y tEne| throwing. arm of Alex the Great | earonsin the-tor Southern California will not play| Won Leet Tied. Pte | Pie re carrie] too much beef for} coupled with some friction with | have * laa 'Geat tae tis tun a ane ES PEM nae cree fo nee "NEW BASEBALL ing Arizons, Stanford and other {7r'\\", ‘ ‘ 1 13 |annner & Wolff Te. Asahi Jeniors Managing the Cubs, cost Alexander Bocing cimd plays the Southern colleges Leo Calland, | ia jim Faas K Arai{much of his old-time effectiveness | je se south Park. the kieastt| LOOP IN NOR }formerty a Seattie high school star SUMMARY susktie is tal ¥ q a Ry ee last season If in form he will be a| St sf VANCOUVER, B. C, Jan. 1 =a mele wand Pang AX®, | Lehman Holmes (ev | Maskell . 2... a Yokote| tower of strength to the Killifer Vancouver, B. C., and Tacoma Graham, Hinrtehs, Kuhns and Camp- {Coo Nowe | 5 rr Nianie | clan. secured franchises in the Wi |bell make up the present team. [p Seais—iiantem’ 6," Minner 3,1 auf Former Cleveland International baseball league, a Whitman trimmed Oregon this Beare |, Aral 2. Free throws 7 ‘sey, “2 "8 | B i | el formed b: , ns lento Aral oxman Is Sign Cireuit formed by an amalgam week without aiticuty. Rich and <p lke nea CASEY CAGERS | by Seattle Club lof the Western Canada league Jurin starring for the Missionaries. cares | | the dead Pacific International a “wer ' ’ |The W tha Walla squad ineup ine ry 1 AIR GO WIN ANOTHER The securing of Vean Gregg, || The other clubs in the six-club [eluded Kaudson, Chandler, Penrose, 23 1 $6) Wk Continuing their unbroken string || newly.signed, Seattle left-winger || are Regina, Saskatoon, Calgary Rich and Sohna i trom| Biay Gagules and Tom Dutty were | of wina, the Knights of Columbus de-|] gives the Indians a real big- || Edmonton, all Canadian cities. Prep Hoop Season Will Get Under Way Friday UEEN ANNE and Franklin, con Q sidered two of the strongest con- tenders for the high school basket- ball championship, clash in the first games of the season, booked tomor row. They meet at Queen Anne. Broadway entertains Lincoln, and West Seattle journeys to Ballard in the other two games. Jesse Douglas, the crack Queen Anne player, will open the season at forward. The Quay attack is built around Douglas and Enoch Shultz, hig running mate. Franklin has also made a late shift in its lineup, starting Hayward Dare at center and shifting Harry Speidel to a guard berth. Neither Broadway nor loom as strong as in former years, according to thelr coaches, as both | teams are made up of inexperienced | men West Seattle and Ballard are of ‘The Maintenance and Division teams are coming down the home stretch in the Telephone league neck and neck, with Maintenance hang~ ing to its lead of one game. Both teams whitewashed their opponents this week in thfee straight games. the heavy anchor man played progressive his scores being 167, Goeorke Prowse, of the Maintenance, ten pine (his week, 191 and 223. Merwin made his debut among the “hello” bowlers with the Division Plant team, and performed ereditably He should strengthen the team consider- ably HB The Commercial team, after wal- loping the lmur leading Muinten- ance three straights before the hotl- days, lost some of their punch during the Christmas layoff. The Division Plant knocked them for three in « row this week. without Kd Dubois and a Martin, were steam rolled by Maintenance by @ one, two, three punt. “gyeeter’ MeCoubrey, of Installation Office, furnished the big figure for the evening with 680. Constuetion Office Hittle bowler with a big 4 Mucklestone, After a» had wiart in the first game, he picked up in the later frames. ’ Introdneed « vo M. it in niwaye able that this man who on first one team and then another, never turns in a good Lincoln | flargely made up of football pinyers, |the majority of whom are new to |the cage game. up as follows for the first gam: | Kraucaunas | Baliard le. Bhew (c) ¥ By | Slingsby ooheeal nell | Nardine ti | Brateett ; Om Honamy | Masterson .........G <4.) Forrestor | <r » Lincoim Broadway Torney me Mondaehein Btrobel r Ochs or Wentworth .c oan MeCioud (c) a Johnapn McCutcheon 6 Mateter (o) | Second team games will precede the first team encounters, with the linitial game getting under way at 3:20 p. m |KILLINGER IS NOW A YANKEE Gien Killinger, Penn State's all | American quarterback, has returned }the contract offered™ him by the |New York Yankees, with his name | written plainly on the dotted | Killinger’s contract is for one year It is likely that he will be. placed | with some high-grade Eastern minor | league club for seasoning, as he has never had professional experience. Still, college stars have occasionally | jumped into the big show directly; and if Frank Baker shows too |much age and the Pennsylvanian }can show enough stuff in «pring | training, he may land a permanent | birth at the etart 'MISKE MATCHED Billy Miske, crack St. Paul heavy weight, will at} rk, N. J., January 16. Jobn |ny Tillman, another of Jack Reddy's stable of boxers, fights Billy Ryan \in Cincinnati the #ame night score, No wonder he is shifted about #0 much. “Angu Doffin, chief monrner for | Transmission, sent out the #. 0, 8, this week when ni ed up to bow! king klengle of the traveled in high eon intro duced, pinchen both « Parse ’ The squads are expected to line | Queen Anne. Franklin Dougias (0) .....-+F. Greene (ey Shulte r Mager | Shreeve € Dare | Gtmeon a Bpeidel 6 Jackson WITH WEINERT meet Charley Weinert from leaguer who hasn't come back to || Brown is the holder of the Vanco too strong a scoring combition for|feated the Toppenish American Le | Fag A | the Washington Park team, this duet | gion five last night, 42 to 28. Bonney || the minors because he couldn't || franchise. The player limit has b | placed Retiee-y, Beattie. Foraton from | doing most of the tallying for the) scored seven field goals for the|] stick in the big show, according || set at 14 men. Parkes, T)14; 6 Seattle, Foyston from|Collins Cubs, The score: | Caneya( while Davidson shot 10 free|] to Gregg’s history. He quit the || Rows, 1:16 Wash. Park Pos Collins Cebs | throws out of 11 tries. |] Cleveland club voluntarily to en- third prciod—t, seattle, Porston trom | Hughes 4 | ect pie At a ter the commercial world; but has || JOR 18 GETTING a Ly ori ¥ arris tre © 2 , Jan, 124—Joe Lynch SATAY: Spa |] suddenty taken a notion that he ||. > BRICKLEY MAY COACH || Viviane mind spending a season || has offered to fight Johnny Butt tor CHICAGO, Jan. 12. — Charley 4 ; ‘the bantam title and tossing ‘em over to Coast league |) the bantam title and let the chasm | Brickley, former Harvard football || hitters. His lay-off from the || Pion take the entire purse. Ge: |star, is here investigating the coach-|| game may have sent the great || Mike McTigue, despairing of get” ing problem at Northwestern univer. lem | sity. | Brickley coached Johns Hopkins tn | 1916, and in 1917 and 1918 he was] mentor at Boston college. |ting a bout with Middleweight |pion Johnny Wilson, is consi claiming the title, since Wilson |now barred from boxing in four Bast trn states, southpaw back some distance; but when with Cleveland he was a star, and should have no trouble delivering in Class AA baseball. | | nm and Battery C/ GUILDER IS A | The Stacy she GOOD PROSPECT | teams ‘re expected to line up as| Roy Guilder, the rightshanded | follows: a pitcher obtained by Vernon from the | Stacy Shewne ad Grand Rapids club, is a real find, ao-| Rapp a cording to word from Bill Essick, | Pressentin c 21 years old, a six-footer, and a won-| |derfully built athlete, He won three | lout of every five games he pitened (GOTHAM FANS for Wis club last season, altho they 4 jfinished in the cellar in their league, LIKE HERMAN | which shows promise. Tho slashing style of Babe Her-| : - —- man, the Coast featherweight, who ROPER WINS AGAIN lost a decison to Andy Chaney in| PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Jan New York recently, has won the| Bob Roper, of Chicago, defeated Dan| Coaster a home with the New York | Dewd, of Boston, by a wide margin |fans, a majority of whom thought | in thelr 12-round bout here last night.' Herman earned a draw with Chaney 12. VAN HEUSEN PATENTED the Worlds Smartet COLLAR - Smarter than the starched collar, more comfortable than the soft collar. Will not shrink, wrinkle orwilt. Nostarching. No“saw” edges. Saves wear on shirts and ties. As single to launder ' as a handkerchief. Nine styles, quarter sizes Fifty cents at dealers Have You Idle Dollars? You should not keep money on hand that is not earning a substantial rate for you. KEEP YOUR SAVINGS WORKING wiTH °* ABSOLUTE SAFETY $1 to $5,000 Accepted Money received on or before the 15th of earns from the first this month — aA SEATTLE SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION O9-SZAvEeE. Neer Tn Copyright, 1922, by PHILLIPS-JONES CORPORATIO 1228 NEW YORK BROADWAY,