The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 28, 1923, Page 13

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of the okey ne big hit the ff the ie cir. x for ‘Coast ex in fh the teams rie in con tables seven thing Prairie being mous katoon Arena jeague in th . du an usual. toon. hands and ws lese charge has ed M b 0 Gonzaga Jack K earns | Tex Rickard |rrcssnscsnienst em ovember 29, Kastern followers of tho masor college sport Will be given an opportunity of view Arrival of ‘Champ’ Man |ing in action the Pacific coast’s great arts | &8t exponent of the forward pass, It oes a pha is doubtful if anothor player in any irpo-Demp seotion boasts the proud passing rec BY FR ANK GETTY Jord of Houston Stockton, bulldog halfback and field general, At any EW YORK, 28.—Appear ance in tho vic tnity of ‘Mudleon [rate there are no figures available which give anyone else the record of | Stockton, Square Garden today of a young mein ae of an elegance both sar In 1922 Stockton passed for a total toriat and lngual—one Mr, Jack |f 1011 yards In olght games—an Kearns, from tho West—awoke © average of 126 yards a game. The! commewhat dormant interest in. the | best competing performance of whtch noble sport of fisticuffs, Kearns is|there Is any record is that of Mo- here for a talk with Tex Rickard} hantt of Notre Dame, in 1921. Mo: about another Dempsey-Firpo fight, | MMdt passed 1,160 yards in 11 games, he modestly admitted. Hoe hinted he | fF AN Average of 105 yards, and thls had come to seo a “syndicate” that] Performance has been advanced as a} Se record. put on a second tilt be: | | Peace ‘eos id's champion and the| 1 the first game of the season this | Argentine clubber but it is Turkeys | YOO" Stockton’ first eight passes to Cranberries that if anyone gots |*stlost: Washington State were: suc- the bout it will be Tex. comaful and netted the Bulldog from | Simultaneously with the arrival of | UF t9.36 yarda’ Gtockton's ninth Dempsey | pass wad grounded, but his 10th was | nanager came a cable} i oe | from furaw fe Buende ‘Aires from Fir | ® 22¥ard heave ‘across the Washing: | po himself, saying that by next year | (OF SEG gal line for’'the ‘wecond | t peeetiadly touchdown, the Argentine heavy ese na wit] 7. the Gonzaga-West “Virginia | have 500 per cent icy ep sionship |Rame at Sah Diego: tast Christmas | ag ag take ye RAMPIONSHIP) Stockton twice ‘shot accurtte phases for my beloved cou to eligible teammates standing on the | So the old familiar palghon ed Easterners’ goal line, only 2 have | under way. A million dollar KAS | these passes dropped. Both were the biggest purse of all time, MOFe | lone shots, which would have boosted | talk of “there will never be another se a tight.” | 4% @¥erage “materiany, and both crowd like that pay to see a fly would have ant touchdowns and| Tho redeeming feature ts that !t| Woe vip, i | Ritila’s defeat. With these really will be a Koda ae Shei two errors, the Bulldog passed a to this prospective Dempsey-Mirp tal of 148 yards in the last quarter No one who clung breathless to 4) of that game, shattered ringside seat for those 100g.) “sigekton' ty not only a passer de| uler | agonizing seconds while our mauler |iuxe and field general, but he I one | was heels over head thru th deny that FopeS | of the finest allround backfield men | select his All-America teams without inp ers dhe jon the coast this year. He is a/ giving Stockton consideration. |. Another knight of the ring Is 4>-| splendid example of the triple threat,| It ia.as much to Stockton's splen Ing his best to promote interest 10) anq Walter Camp cannot afford to’ did work as ‘tt to the conching ot | the personalities of fistiana these days, none other than that stngular TOBIN STAR BUNTER the first or third base line or pull a Senegalese, Battling Siki. Bunting is fast becoming a lost art| fast drag with equal cleverness. According to Moe Lavy, the bat-|in the opinion of no less an authority | Tobin's great xpecd, his ability to tler’s manager, the dusky erstwhile /than the famous Hughey Jennings. | bunt and a penchant for crossing up Nght heavyweight champion !s loose | Johnny Tobin of the.St. Louls Browns | the opposition by hitting one hard, somewhere in the wills of New Jer-|is one of the few great bunters still| maxes him one of the most feared | sey. When last seen on those shores | doing business, Tobin can bunt down batters in the American league, | Siki was fraternizing with tax! driv- | ers up in Harlem and giving away | $10 bills. | The Senegalese, it appears, demand. ed from his manager $1,000 of the purse achieved by gamely and good | naturedly accepting a lacing at the hands of Kid Nort a fortnig ago. The sudden wealth went to} Siki's woolly head and he started on genial rampage, leaving a trall ot} largesse behind him whereby his an-| ed ager, wringing that BEACON HILL TEAM PLAYS ON THURSDAY HE fast-going Beacon Hill grid eleven will take on the rk football aggregation at South at 2 afternoon Bil Tu in high mainstay Beacon ined ¥ AGGIES PLAY PORTLANDERS PORTLAND—Savage scrimmages under the arc lights at Multnomah field last night, in which the Wing dd the second ¢ sawdust, fin of the clu ir struggle with Ore Thanksgiving Day Word from s says th Coach Rut will give seme of his bench warmers a chance to make good tomorrow clubmen ar ished the prep: Aggies here Top, Left to Right—Earl Anderson, Harold Anderson. Bottom—Ross Anderson, Carl Anderson, Lyle Anderson. IS DEFEATED Pa.—A len tow 1 Irish Fa-| wh ands. Jim-|ejther, and one of and Steve Cole, Al- a draw in ight nus O'Brien ht rounds. . 26.—The Smiths and the Joneses v ay for the An take seats in the rear of the room to be the case here at the Wesleyan Uni This happen five Andersons are on the football squad. They ar brothers, in 10 r ayer. Earl em is a manager rather than a | Anderson, of Eikhart, Ind., is quarterback; Harold Anderson, of Robinson, Ill, is guard; Ross Anderson, of Fairbury, Ill, t# end; Lyle An 3t. Paul, Minn., is tackle, jot the team. lerson, of and Carl Anderson, of Sibley, Ill, ie manager in eig “BUST” IN CITY SERIES George {3 ih c TWO STARS SLUMP Cubs, finished I of > ss peed . Senttle’n Leading Theatre Whit x troit i NOW PLAYING the ( P ’ THE BEST THANKSGIVING ATTRACTION IN THE TOWN mn gar lived up t POPULAR MATINER Thanksgiving Day and Saturday GREAT Only ly of tt DR. N. Yow Physician and Sur- xeon, uses Chineso ts and herbs In tng all diseases men and women. Hpeciailzes in stom- ach trouble, and other ailments, plimen great a nr ra Dr. N. Yow Chinese Kemedy Co. With the Magnetic M Coy i 4 ade MA In-4308, ot rani . DALE WINTER Nights 50e, Matinees — —ALL NEXT WEEK— Si NDAY, Mats. Dr. Wo, Chinese Doctor Licensed Herb Speciatiot treats all aliments witm TOUGH JOB FOR SISLER ee ee oe One of ¢ * e «et well suffering from ach, rheurnatiam, nead- wat, ‘golds kidney, blood, ||] With isorders. Call of write E Hee We Chinese Medicine On. 06 James St, cor, thd A Betablished 1903. Phone to hit ALLL NEED REST ERTON—CHARLESTON PORT ORCHARD Take Fast Steamers at Colmai ASK YALE tie >» = * - SPECIAL NIGHT sunvics * PICTURE PROOF wees ae oe Mal : ‘ ; te cay HI you *cturday aed’ Bun: bq || nth Ma Mas. COBURN AND A COHAN CAST of COMEDIANS ANYTHING PF * SHAT SALE ‘TOMORROW aoe sere ( s PHices peg cot EY NAVY YARD ROUTE EL)| sents, 203 Mince: tej : it oT] | | saturday Mat. HOUSTON STOCKTON stably cabinet, having been given a Open Season mandate by President Ebert. a Quarter ‘There was no early word to the of a Pound Th da effect he had been any more suc ion urs cessful than others who tried since a Day. 3 vow ag _.| Stresemann fell, but Steger Wald, a Es N DIEGO, Cal, Nov. 28! ember of the right wing of the| He Will, Celebrate TiUuana’s greatest racing #¢8502 | center party, is a politician of abil ¥ ivi | gets under way tomorrow. ity and an able economist. “He is| Thanksgiving ‘The rejuvenated plant, on which | eader of the Christian trade union. at a Big ‘DRIVE IS AIDED BY FIGHT FANS Shower Coins to Help Feed German Children Mayor Brown took the ring at the close of the Young Dudley and | Traveling ‘Travie Davin fight at the Crystal Pool Tuesday night and made a direct appeal for donations for the relief of starving German children, And as @ result Hizzoner was soon doing a “Dance of the Coins" in a frantic effort to catch the shower of bills and silver which hit the ring. At the final~count $892 wore heaped up and a generous voice in the gallery shouted “Make it $900," and tossed down the additional eight dollar, This amount pro- yided one good meal for one day for 45,000 German bables, which will be distributed by the American Quaker organization, Workers for the fund gathered at headquarters of the American|, committee at noon Wednesday end mado thelr reports to Chairman William Pigott, The Seattle drive Ezra Meeker, Trail Blazer, Who Ml continu itil Beattie’ tn yt Decmtar o |.) Was eeporeed a pina Rerae TER Ed Near Death BAVARIAN MAY Three Weeks Ago, Is Up and Feeling Fit as a Fiddle. Despite His HEAD CABINET Adam Stegerwald in Berlin as Red Clashes Menace 93 Years, Jus" Dorais, former Notre Dame BY CARL D: GROAT He Is Plunging star, that the Gonzaga Bulldog '8| arniieq Press Staff Correspondent) Into the Task jknown as “The Notre Dame of the) ‘peRLIN, Nov, 28.—Germany has West turned to her storm center, Bavaria, = 5 for a chancellor, Adam Stegerwald, born {n Ba- former premier of ‘Ti juana £0. Pa ee wees knit together the fragments of a of Finishing His Movie Scenario, and Is Gaining at the Rate of sh $200,000 has been expend-|'t* and a writer on sociological subjects. Family Reunion. sie fall, ow mpick and span in Steger Wald'’s summons to the my « for the bugle calling the} chanceliorship came at a moment He Is Shown ) the post for the first race.|whon the capital seethed with the > of the finest horse flesh on} most imposing array of police, nent is In the Tijuana barns | bayonets, tanks and other trappings | y other fine steeds will soon |of war seen since 1918, Search helr way to the track |lighte played thru snow and. rain, features mark the opening| straining thru the slush of a dis-| wana inaugural han-| agreeable winter day to pick out cap and the Signal Hill handicap.|communists supposedly staging a The nominations are as follows | Moncow-inspired demonstration, Tijuana I Thousands of laborers, among communists, Here Entering the Frye Hotel, Where He Is Writing His Screen Story. augural handicap: Maxt- | Photo by Price & Carter mac, Firm F 4, Little Chief, Tan- | them possibly many f I Curiand, “Osprey, “Abadane,| aid attempt to enter the Lust-| Fy Meeker. Well Soe erry Madde, | garten, but were prevented by the|LuZra MeCCKeY, Well, Dorcus, Doughregan, | Police, who then camped down with Knighthood, Feylance, Billy, Star,|*tacked arms. A few of the work. Salvo, Wild Heather, Hi. |¢T™ were woun: while about 70 hive, Reap, Wynnewood. arrests were made thrmout tire city. M1 Hill handicap: Patty Kelty, {Otherwise thie night from which so Feyiance, Kinglike, Coeur de| much had been feared when whis- Pr ‘Adonis, Kalghthood, |Perings of red revolts spread, pass- Bayonet, Mildur, The Aimoner, Litt, | 0? qetly. Odd Seth, Ten Buttons, Pud. Matd All Set for His Turkey Dinner MAYENCE, Nov. 28,—Separatists | today controlled practically the en- E tire Palatinate as a result of the| occupation of Franenthal by Rhine- | land forces from Spire. | GOES BACK TO COLLE tel Frye working on his histor A big first year in the statement of Manager McGraw of the Giants that he was the “eel nester in the National league, lH y affected th of the hat io majors, and Harry kaon, The youns | the season was over That is Three weeks ago he was re- ported to be dying—he was crit- ay oa | leally ill with a throat and bronchial affection—and today | my lif: he is in his own room at the Ho- motion picture proposition and | planning to eat his quota of the | Thanksgiving turkey Thursday at a family reunion at the home | never co ef one of his grandsons, the Rev. tired author and embryo motion Sound country wit picture producer. home of the Rev. Mr. Templeton Meeker appears fully recovered | Thursday to eat turkey and celebrate fe recoye! he 2 from the severe ack which he suf es recovery of their honored for fered some weeks ago, which confined | will be the 70th Thanksgiving nee I came, to this country.” ker said in an interview at the He | hotel Tuesday. “it'was| Following his Thanksgiving ding the hardest sickness I've ever had injner, Meeker will go to Olympia and said that he lost about| either Friday or Saturday to attempt pounds during his fllness, “But|to repeat a feat he did in December I'm gaining It back again, a quarter-|2 and 3, 1870, when he picked 5% | pound a day,” he boasted, “and the| varieties of flowers blooming in the {work I’m starting again is difficult |‘‘commons” in and about that town enough to put me on my feet. I} His collection was pressed and he id stay well and work,|took it to New York, where it ene ated intense interest. “If it don't him to a bed at the home of another | day grandson, his phystelan, Dr. C. 0.) 3 Templeton, 01 Cascadia smiled when he admitted the nin | anyway.” Templeton, 4711 12th | So all the descendants of this| freeze I should be able to repeat that ara Meeker, | snowy-haired and white-bearded pa-| feat now, trian h of the plains and the Puget |clared. * education. He says he ing to be a bal) a Southern college “| player. |MEN’S CLUB Washington Will Not Sur- render Oil Operator Gov. Loula Hart Wednesday re-| fusedvto grant extradition papers to]. under the auspices of the Me | surrender R. I. Barton, former Great aner pred club of the Fir Presb | Falls oll operator, to the authorities | church Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m ‘or E. T. | WILL KIN Kellogg, Barton's attorney a aoain uditorium. The program | Barton was arrested last month on sé ° | |a warrant {asued by a justice of the|..*" J: McArthur, moderator, pre-! Sings Banana siding; invocation, Rev. M. A. Mat ews; orchestra selection, De Mo! orchestra; reading, “The Lepe |peace of Great Falls, charging him with grand larceny. He was accused of having misappropriated funds ob tained fn the sale of an oil } | &o. | IN Barton posted bail and has been at | LA¥Té “A saperned aare sok . if “BEHIND THE J tabs felt Bid sel geeseperin ey, Se Y F Tendencies of Toda: ucat |ness, J. H. Hamilton of Great Falls, | |then brought a civil sult against Bar | ton in the courts here } HERMIE KING Barton ¢ charges are and His Symphonte Soloists |spite work and were filed after he had refused to return $5,000 wh 30 ox'tinen RUNWAY was appropriated as earnest money | SEE ™ INADORA s 1" 1 Life,” Mayo T. Ma lingham; offering, receive |xirl reserves, under the sup jof Miss Zada French Mrs. Arthur H. SCENES” vis clares the well; pipe and be | when the sale of the le was turned |down by Hamilton, he sald When the facts were presented to] mor Hart, thé governor refused MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Noy. Fifty-six million dollars will GIVE CONCERT} | Mathes, of Belling- | ham, will be the principal speaker the free concert and lecture giv terian | Miss Lucille Hayslett; cornet solo, | Odd Bits im tlhe News Bananas—Razor Holdup—Coat Tails —Some Shock—“Baby” Bandits Youth Is Loser by a Coat Tail Two suits of clothes and one pair of coat tails proved the undoing of 1-1 J. M. Moore, 19, Tuesday night: Moore was wearing two suits of clothes. He excited the suspicions n did so several months ago} of Patrolman G. W. Christy. Chriss presence of Fd Clayton, fruit/ty stopped Moore, but the latter and known as “The Ban jumped on the running bgard of a passing car. Christy grabbed his coat tails and now’ Moore is im jail on a robbery charge. . “Baby” Bandits n’s in th: lay ial Od Song; Is Shot ou sing “Yes, We Have No} Bananas’ you do it at your own Vl r Gus Nelson, a logger tes =a fied Wednesday in the city ho on by ion | 10, an| ‘Tuesday night ne-| thru the door of a soft drink rf lor at 501% King st, and without | word, shot Nelson thru the leg,| 28.| police charge. be} Police are'searching for the ban- Clayton walked] the application for extradi. | *P* mt i improvements during th ana magnate. Get Spanked » Sundays and Holidays, Barton is now a resident of Se-| D¢xt years by the Northern KA ITY, N S.— Tw Mntinees, 100 and . reget Sel pacific “Raltwig. Gos. Prewidentl 5 K S$ CITY, Nov. 28—Twa San SHEOutinener at ni and in. business heré de Donnsliy. told the inteevane| Mz0r Dandie 18 ‘baby’? bandits attempted to hold up ‘ontinuows 1 to | Rta ie sire : | Mrs, H. M. Mitchell-and steal her = reo commission at a rate in P| UNDER A NEW ni eivea | FOL Oatinietes: awetinet ware Latest Wrinkle) jis. ‘st. sitchen took a revolves from Washington, D. C., Wedne t $41,000,000 in the past] e razor-bandit 1s the newest] away from one boy ard spanked him day, receipts will be taken alll three years and months on im-| ¥T ¢ Seattle criminals, ie ber eset The other fled Jinaured parcels delivered the | seovanietitny he added | learned Wednesday _ P 7 i} %. Sh on | Nats Dally £190, Bv0'7-0, Eve boc, Mev 900 | Dostoffice department on and atter| “the earnings, on the capital in-| Tuesday night R. Shelton looked : wat December 1, Postmaster C. M.| vested, will be about 3 per cent|at the keen edge of a razor when| TO Try jae Dealan WATSON TER | Perkins announced Wednesday for 19 Donnelly predicted. a colored bandit held him up at roadway ent Comedy |- — —— n= re perendect Favorites —iine—|| Greater Love Hath No Man esti ines REATER Jove hath no man” Patrick Lallo, 16, of 1826 20th ave. S., gave his life Tuesday night, dying from a knife thrust he received near the heart Sunday, when he sprang between Sam Firro, who was armed with a dirk, and Patrick's Italy-born father, Joseph Lallo, Patrick's father, his life saved by the quick and self- sacrificing action of his young son, is conscience- stricken. Firro is a fugitive and the object of a wide- spread search by Seattle police. And the quarrel between the elder Lallo and his erstwhile friend and roomer, Firro, and which cost the lad’s life, was over which province in Italy pro- duced the best wine. Both men were born in Italy and upheld their respective provinces stubbornl; ZUUN AND DREIS Finally they carried their quarrel out into the street, in front of the Lallo home. Fearing trouble, SEED IRVING young Patrick Lallo followed them. The argument be- and : STIN MOORE came more heated, and then, offi als sé a long- a Sinclair and Company bladed and keen-edged knife flashed in Firro’s hand. : = With a cry, Patrick flew in front of the descending EMILIE LEA knife and saved his father’s life when the blade sank h Clarence Tock and " With (lo Keuteon into his own breast. Pantagescope ARTURO BERNARDI ORPHEUM A CIRCUIT VAUDEVILLE Now Pinying Twlee Daily AMMINCAN DEBUT OF THe Gaatiokd THe ‘SUPER. MAN THE AWKWARD AGE* | / | merce, Oklahoma, th ave. n ast Terrace s dit took a “cut,” both of § pocketbook — and he for Theft of Lead Charged with complicity int the theft of 3,000 pounds of pig lead, valued at $240, from the Brémerton navy yard, in November, 1922, Jo« Man Shocked sep Blatt, a civilian, went’ Oa Gal before Federal Judge E. EB. Cushy But Satisfied |\\"" Wednesday. Blatt is accused Leonard Gotchi, 25, 2356 17th ave.| of having received and concealed the was suffering from burned] stolen property. He in business | hands Wednesday, but was perfect-|ns a junk dealer at Bremerton at ly satisfied with his lot. The rea-|tne time of the crime, naval authorle n for the satisfaction lay in that|, ed 0 volts of electricity! Clarence Kerrick, under indictment hru his body when a pile] or commit g the thett, will be ver cable which he was handlt conslusian out on Eastlake ave., came in con tact with the power line. R. V.}- Drake, telephone company truck| driver, was nearbly and by méans of Aged Doaple Happe artificial re ation resuscitated the! at Thanksgiving Gotchi was shocked by what hap-| _- 88, just DE Sullivan t livan, husky and hearty, has @ petite whetted for the turkey wife is preparing for him, raised the turkey. Mr. and Mrs. Sule | pened, but perfectly satisfled with] the result of Drake's prompt ac tion. jst *. Make Policeman Chauffeur Thugs|* ed 68 y JOPLIN, Me 28 5 68 Thanksgiving Allison, motorcycle pollo linners ther. Neither has had uing four robbers who held up the|a sick day. They have three hearty Ashbury, Mo, state bank, was am.-| “children,” all past 60 bushed by the bandits, disarmed an Their only regret is that the “ehile forced to chauffeur them to Com-|dren” cannot be home to enjoy the mother’s culinary delicacies, 53 years later,” he de =

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