Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
About Fights and Fighters Y LEO H, LASSEN HE system of having two judges along with the referee render decisions in lo- eal smokers has proved to be ae ncoesettl e fans have more confi- “dence in the judgment of ‘three men than they have in ~ must be admitted that the Verdicts lately have suited the most exacting. Binco tho judge system was in @ugurated Ad Schacht has been perking as the third man In the ring all of tho fights. Schacht handles Mther Seattle official, but he had | the opinion of one, and it} The men better in the ring than any} WET FIELD GIVES * Be & * * & es #8 # * * & * & & & | | » & EVERETT HIGH TURNS OUT ANOTHER G seeercecwercs cme a * & & _. Star in His Own Right ‘Purple Tornado Heavy Favorite to Win Finale |Hard-Hitting Washington Backfield Will Have Edge | Over Speedy Oregon Backs if Field Is Muddy To- morrow; Other Gridiron Gossip wu the prospect of a field heavy with mud for their annual game Saturday at the stadium, Washington and Oregon can be prepared for a mud battle. : In case of a heavy field, Washington will be big favorites to win because of the better forward line at Washington and of the superior line plunging of George Wilson and Elmer Tesreau, With the exception of Fullback Latham, the Oregon back- field is fast but light, and their speed won't avail much on a heavy field. Oregon's backfield has been the bright spot of a mediocre team, as the line is said to be inferior to the usual Oregon forwards, On comparative scores, which real- ly mean but Uttle, Washington should win handily, Oregon has been defeated by both Washington BUD BERCOT SLATED TO GO TONIGHT RYTHING is set for tonight's Austin & Salt's gym | Lonnie Austin has been besieged all Bo curd at Worked so long here and booted some | week by u flock of would-be gladia- - jons, as all referees wilh that} (0) who the fans lost confidence in him. It} Tgot to be that they thought Schacht | ‘he limelight and he will give as Owas wrong tho minute he climbed | many of them as possible a chance thru the ropes. to water and fs turning out strong The change has worked out well) tno younger generation !s begin. [Abd here's hoping that the system) ning to take to boxing like a duck fentinues to function, because poor | to water and are turning out strong after quite a period of tnactivity In} LAST GAME FOR the amateur ranks here. Austin &|] QUARTET 8 pla : thet Salt plan on staging one of thelr} “oot uciay will be the last guiakihat mateur bills about once every two | wane aati gd Xp to] Ray Hill, Leonard Ziel, Wayne Hall| State and O. A. C., teams far out- classed by Washington, ‘Tomorrow's game will be the last &amo of tho regular season for both clubs and ts the only Coast confer ence game scheduled, ‘Tho kickoff Saturday Is scheduled for 2p, m, are anxious to break into weeks. ‘The boys. who show Up toe a al eee aa . best advantage will be given special | 8 ¥ apelin Mae So » It tn understood, in| Dest advantage will be Rive Washington. ‘This quartet has played | If they | | sion fights in the near "i r “| care to make boxing a business, will| Well for Washington and has given | Frazer Is Blossoming With Mets This Great Young Defense Player Is Showing Real Form for Hockey Club ORDON FRASER, the husky Se- attle defenne player, is the most effective man {n the Coast league at his position at this stage of the Coast puck race. For ae couple of seasons Fraser was just a 0-6o hockey player, big and strong, but lacking finish, But with the start of this season Fraser “arrived” with a bang, He's starting faster, playing smart, de- tensive hockey, using that big frame of his for heavy checking, and in spite of his sizo he has plenty of apeed, Fraser haa proved to bo a smart acorer, too, and he's Just about the hardest shot in the league, Only a youngster ty his early twenties, Fraser has a great hockey future ahead of him, and with the finenve that his game will acquire with more seasoning he should take his place with the great defense men of the ico game, SASKATOON VS. VICTORIA TONIGHT Saskatoon ts playing {ts third game of the Coast trip in Victoria, B. C., tonight, The Crescents lost to both Vancouver and Seattle, and it didn’ look any too impressive here with Newsy Lalond, thelr spark plug, out of the gure. They play Vancouver again Mon- | be given'a chance to break in on the | ven vervico to the Purple and | Gold. big cards as soon as they show enough stuff on the ball to warrant Decisions make the men step more | ‘em 4 try at bigger game. ito win as It's pretty hard for losing| Bud Bercot has fought the last two | fighters to land matches. * main events of the amateur bills and | won both of his bouts via the knock & good move, as no-decision fight states are the havens of chump ters. | FIVE TEAMS ARE UNDEFEATED Five major football teams in the! United States went thru the present | jout route. Bud ‘will fight the fea-|**ason without a defeat. Yale, Cor ture attraction again tonight. The |Re!l. Michigan, Iitinols and California | younger Bercot has displayed a|4Fe the only elevens with perfect rec r Sailor Cox, or} world of class and, altho he only | fds and California was marred by s he is also known, | weighs 110 pounds and {a in his early | the scoreless tle with Nevada, tty mean punch. He has}‘teens, he scraps like a battle-| Yale and Cornell wero the out: a few fights and knows) scarred veteran. Between eight and|*tanding tenms of the East, while bout boxing skill. |ten bouts will comprise tonight's | Michigan and Illinois were tied for tin, considered the best | card, which will get under way at|the Big Ten title, ° authority in the Northwest, | $:30 o'clock. | Centre was conceded to be the! @ays that Cox would be a great pros- As it ts first ¢ best team in the South, their only take the pains to! nenooves the Abang Rast ane Ie defeat being at the hands of Penn straight. pe on hand early, Capacity crowds | S¥!vania, | entirely too much.” have been attending the bi-monthly| Nebraska had the edge in the Mis ays Austin, ‘true hitting power! amateur cards. sourt valley conference, altho the| Somes from a straight punch or a Cornhuskers were tied by Missourt | | MULTNOMAH | PFANN BEST thook with timing and leverage be and Kansas, | QUARTER OF YEAR : — : BEATEN BY ges aa Aoae Wek hak Cock | mighty men of hockey. Fraser is not only a good defense ' Cox Should Learn to Hit Correctly For a green fi Freddie Mack Arriving with vengeance this year, Gordon Fraser, Seat. tle's young defense player, is taking his place with the GORDON FRASER | |day night and then leave for the | prairie. | CALGARY H NEXT WEEK | Calgary will furnish the opposition for tho Seattle Mets next week. The |Tigers aro bringing « fast lineup, including Cully Wilson, Bernie Mor. ris and Eddie Oatman, all familiar | figures to Coast hockey fans. The return of Wilson to Seattle will be the occasion for a big turn- Jou® of Seattle bugs, as the scrappy {Cully ts just about the most popular player that ever hit Seattle. HONORS HOWARD GRAY | Because he best exempli- | fies the qualities of a Prince- | ton football player in char- | acter, spirit and ability, How- | ard Gray of Omaha, star end, has been awarded the Poe Memorial cup by fellow stu- dents. The cup is awarded. ‘annually in memory of | Johnny Poe, tiger star, killed in France, DARTMOUTH IS VICTOR ; OVER BLUE IN EW YORK, Nov. 30—Dartmouth defeated Columbia on the Polo Grounds here yesterday afternoon, $1 to 6. During the first half it ap- peared that the game might result in a Columbia victory, but because of an injury to Walter Koppisch, and fullback for Perey nton, the tide of victory shifted favor of the New Hampshire Up until Koppisch's removal |from the game, Columbia actually lexcelled the Dartmouth eleven. in eleven. | | *% | BY FRANK GETTY | AJEW YORK, Nov, 30,.— Walkers |4N trom East and West, from Can- Who Won Handicap Walk? * © ody Seems Able to Tell Another judge arrived. “Disqualify the entire Canadian team,” was his injunction. More outcry. hind it. Tie will have to learn a lot before his Hitting power will become effective.” — |Pfann, the great Cornell star, is the| 727, but he is proving a valuable scorer and packs one of Fights in Ball AGGIE TEAM With the Arena closing down after] C pass and a blocked punt were in- the hockey season and with the Crys-/ strumental In sending the Mult- fal Pool being used for swimming | nomah A. C. gridders down to de- Must think about a place to stags| their shows next spring and summer. | COlles® eleven here yesterday. Chances are that some arrange-| The first touchdown came early “Cox looks like a comer to me, but | outstanding quarterback of the year.| the hardest shots in the ice game, Park Next Summer IRTLAND, Nov. 80.—A forward Seain in April the local promoters | reat before the Oregon Agricultural ment will be made with the Coast |! the first quarter when Gill pass- Teague baseball officials here for the |®4 0 Carpenter, who dashed 28) He has been able to do everything well, altho he isn’t much of a kicker. Pfann is the best scorer In the country and {= @ powerful runner, VIRGINIA M. I. | DEFEATS POLY ev ‘CHARLEY WHITE AND JOHNNY ITs Johnny Trambitas, the promising |Against another boxer White or! Meets Dode Bercot, ada and from foreign lands walked| The walking contest became a talk- in the 13th annual handicap walk of |!Mg contest. Everyone talked at once, the Walkers’ club of Amorica yester-|™&ny objecting to disqualification of aay, but nobody knows who walked | the young winner. Several other TRAMBITAS ARE MUCH ALIKE | isis ‘tie prise contestants crossed’ the finish Tine, | Officinin of the Walkers’ club and| Dut could find no one to pay aay at- the registration committes of the | tention to them and check them off. Metropolitan A. A. U. struggled t Soon the officials became angry in the main| Against an aggressive boy they both | gst serpd rugged. to- hs ‘ day to straighten out the tangle into | With the judges and everybody went ent of next Tuesday night's eard|look like champions. White always| which the $9 starters had walked |Ome. ‘The club officials hoped to an- young Portland lightweight, who|Trambitas does not 5 good. | use of the park for summer shows. ‘There's little likelihood of a fight @rena being built here until the ame is legalized in tho state, as hoxing in Washington at present de- Pends entirely upon the whims of the city and county officials find the pro- Moters would be taking a big chance fn sinking a lot of dough In an arena. CORNELL IS GIVEN SCARE BY PENNSY HILADELPHIA, Nov. 30.—Gil Dobie's*Comell eleven, altho vic torious over Pennsylv a yesterday afternoon, 14 to 7, recetve ing scare from the fighting Quakers. Pennsylvania, on the short end of 2to-1 odds, fought hard and in many Stages of the contest. actually out- Palyed the Cornell team. George Pfann, ptain of the win- ming team, was responsible for both tallies. He was playing his last game for Doble and was by far the Most brilliant player on the field. a sicken- PENN STATE IS LOSER TO. PIT FORBES FIELD, Pittsburg, Nov. 20.—Pitt defeated Pen: here y a heavy field. and the most $ Carl Be Whistle blev VERMONT LOSES TO MARQUETT quette rity defeated the Uni Versity of Verm in an interne tional football game here yesterd 20 to 0 NOTRE DAME. 13-0 WINNER ST. LOUIS, Altho tr Mendous fa es, the Notré Dam football tearm was able to score on B13 to 0% over the St. Lou tnive eleven here yester¢ UTAH AGGIES DEFEAT The Univer: t only two ot t football elev y of Tilinols, will Jo 8 year’s championship yards across the club goal line, ‘Try| ROANOKE: Va. Nov. 30-—The j ne clul o ly i |for point waa mised, Just atter | Vi#inia Military Institute defeated jthe second halt had started, Tebbs,|the Virginia Polytechnic Institute) | Aggie linesman, broke thru the club| here yesterday, 6 to 0, in a thrill- | line and blocked a punt. The ball|ing battle. Wyrdham White, star| year, and many fana, are forming the | His ight here in Seattle against Ed rolied to the five-yard line, where Spinion that Trambites is an exact|@!¢ Shannon was terrible. A week | Tebbe fell on ft. Four downs gave| DAlfback for the winners, arose| O00 Toll gamots Chicago bat-|0F 80 later he took on Muft Bronson the Beaver eleven thelr second | fom a sick bed to play tn the con-|{1P CE Oo it ett in the left |(m Portland and knocked the latter at the Crystal Pool, a second Charley|gave Benny Leonard a great fight White in the making? because Benny would lead to him. | A number of boxing erities-who| Thruout his career White has ave seen him tn action the past | ¢ither looked like a champ or a bum. | touchdown. | test, and it was he who scored tho) book route. jcokt in a few punches, Shannon | nn 4 | lone touchdown. I te-the: first place Trambitas ts a|“idn't lead and Bronson did. | act aft real lightweight. White has always| Aggressive boys havo had bad luck 'STANFORD MEN been a natural lightweight and one|Doxing Trambitas. Back several WEST VIRGINIA ¢ the f who could come in at| Years ago when just a beginner they ‘ind bexan to feel the power of John's ithout trouble. left hook. He knocked out Frank Next Trambitas is the possessor of | Pete, Mike O'Dowd, and other boys er 135 pounds ringside | GIVEN LETTERS PALO ALTO, Cal. 0.—Lat-| tern were yesterday awarded to 24 LOSES TO W. & J.| MORGANTOWN, W. Va, Nov. 36. [members of Stanford's football| West Virginia, hitherto undefeated, |a natural left hook that resembles | Who were going good at that time, | squad. Those who recelved the| went down to defeat here yestetday | White's in delivery and hitting pow-|. The other night {n Tacoma Tram | coveted emblems are Capt. Cam-jat the hands of the Washington andler, Trambitas hits harder with his|bitas caught Bercot with some w | bell, Capt.-elect Lawson, Cravens,| Jefferson team, 7 to 2. left hand than his right, a fact which |!0ps that shook Dode from hig te |Shipkey, Baker, Cuddeback, Wheat,| It was a splendid game, featured] {is seldom found in any boxe |to his teeth, but his great stamina | Woodward, Middleton, Thomas, Mur-| by the playing of Nardaccl, star W.| Going on with the comparison, |8"4 condition served him in good Faville, stead and ho pulled thru where many boxers would have gone down for| | tay. Johnston, Cleveland, | & J. halfback, West Virginia threat | Nevers, Solomon, Dennis, Ludcke, | ened scores on neveral occasions, but | name type of fighters. They can box | Neill, Loomis, Dole, Mitchell Dwight,| either fumbles, misplays or ponal-|as good as the next one, but }and Hunt, tes cost their chance on the punch to put them over big. both Trambitas and White are th: OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHE | will feature some new names again. RN) If possible ho will use Pete Bross, the soc « Great Falls middle. —__-—_ — orien “4 ore g\Wwelght, in the semi-final, This lo SSE morris oe cal middlewelghts have all suffered a Y eu, wows our ui. <-W siceest wick I cor AW 2 | fiteden Shanes ot heart ‘since Bross trimmed E Harms last week and PATIENT FEEL THis EveNWe, A oF “TH! MEAL, WAS LISTENING <—~( SupUP A] don't caro for any of the aggressive AFTER STRIPPING “TH Gears [7 “10 Nou EAT CELERY ~~. An’ Gip giawoel oda Be |W WIG AW ON THAT MEAL [7 SOUNDED LIKE SOMEBODY r, : ‘| YesTeRDIY?~ HA~You + || BREAKING A WICKER orice || OLYMPIA FALLS “| Were OnLy FIVE YaRDS From |’\ BASKET! = How You . “the IN ANNUAL TILT i LIKE “10 CROWD SOME Nice EEBLE WAT I OLYMPIA, Wash, Nov. 30.—Out- “TH' GOAL, WHEN You FUMBLED Le UAT SECOND HELPING OF COLDURKEY, CRANGERRY / _ COULDN Ger welghed but not outclassed, Olympia MINCE PIE! BUT You TELL, AN’ PLUM PUDDING, /— } UP AN KICK high school fell before the onslaught PLNED A GRekr 9 NOW BUS Qe HAHA. Ms MH’ CREASE f the Jefferson high eleven of} 4 our OF YOUR | Portland here, yesterday. The final t | 7, GAME, ¢ score wes 14-0, A crowd estimated KILTS F | [to be one of the largost which have ever witnessed a football game in| | Olympla, attended the Thanksgiving day |/AVENUE ELEVEN | WINNER IN GAME Defeating the Washington Park Juniors by a 21-7 score at Washing. | park, ‘Twenty. Sighth Avenue Athletic club eleven | ton yesterday, the seoms to be in a fair to cop | the -elty 135-pound football cham. | pionship. Games with tho boys| from 28th ave. may be schedule by calling the manager, L. Seigel, at BA st-1077, H yr #| STATE CHAMPION LEFT UNDECIDED BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 20.—A 66 tle game between Johns Hop-| kina and the Univers of Mary lay, left the state foot mpionship up in tho alr game v played before a large | | MANY TEAMS | | The Central Y. M. C. A. of Toronto boasts of 60 basketball teams. them. There were old, hardy veterans of the heel and toe and youngsters who never knew an “Eveready” in the field that stumped away from city hall about the time most folks were sitting down to their Thanksgiving turkey. Young Charley Eschenbach, of the Pastime Athletic club, was first inish at Surf ave. Coney island. en came G. Hristow, sporting the silks of the Canadian Y, M. C. A Willie Piant, who is to walkers what Dempsey is to the prize ring, was |fourth, having at from » ant administered a sound defeat rateh, to Granville, the Canadian walker, who finished 18th, reversing the sult of the national seven-mile ch plonship last month. The officials had checked off the first 27 arrivals and the spectators were drifting away and It seemed to Caruso Dan Salt ts bustly engnged| be all over when tho first of the| in lining up tho rest of his bill and | Judges who had been stationed along | the course arrived breathlessly. “Disquality Eschenbach,” he in structed the officials, “unfair walk ing.”* An outery of protest arose. DON MILLER rrot BLH always comes tn bunches. After losing to No: braska, Coach Knute ‘© Dame has suffered bit of hard luc Don Miller, st of N Dame's great backfield waa then forced out of the gamo with two cracked ribs as the result of an injury in the game with | Rounce the winner at an early date. GONZAGA IS BEATEN BY DETROITERS 1D fears Nov. 30,—The Univer. sity of Detroit eleven defeated | jonzaga university of Spokane, Wash, “the Notre Dame of the West,” by a score of 13 to 7 ina fast game here yesterday. Stockton played best for Gon- zaga, while Capt. Welch and Brett starred for the winners. ‘KANSAS AND MISSOURI TIE LAWRENCE, Kan., Nov. 80.—The University of Missourl and the Uni. versity of Kansas battled to a 8-to-3 here yesterday in the annual kagiving cot I tie Th eer ee FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1928. WASHINGTON BIG EDGE OVER * & REAT MACHINE® % OREGON * 8 4% Fine ‘Fear Completed With Win Benson Tech, of Portland, Snowed Under by Score of 66 to 0 BY TOM OLSEN IVERETT high school's days of grid superiority did not pansy when Enoch Bagshaw left the prep institution to take up similar duties at the University of Washington, The City of Bmokertacks i» right now represented by an eleven nearly as, if not as powerful as any turned out by the present university coach, Yesterday Everett closed tts regue lar playing schedule by administer. ing an Impressive 66 to 0 beating to the Beuson Tech high school eleven of Portland. It was Everett's sixth game this season. The team won all of its contests by margins of 26 points or more. In yesterday's contest Everett out. classed the Portiand eleven in all de- partments. The team played vicious football, made breaks and took ad- vantage of them. Byerett opened the season with a 33 to 7 victory over the Alumni ‘team. In the next game the prep | team defeated the U. 8. 8. Mississippi team 26 to 0. Everett won from the Whatcom: team of Bellingham, 26 to 0 next, and then Puyallup, 67 to 0, Montesano was snowed under by an 87 to 7 score, and yesterday's 66 to 0 victory over Benson Tech ended the regular season, According to unofficial reports, Everett is endeavoring to arrange a | post-season game with some strong prep eleven in the East for either Christmas or New Year's day. It is certain that the game would not be played with Scott or Walte high schools of Toledo, as both elevens have met defeat earlier in |the season, it is reported. | Definite word regarding the inter- section contest is expected to be made within the next few days. It is understood that there is no objec- |tion on the part of the Everett fac: julty to such @ contest, as all of the players are unusually high in their | scholastic work. | Credit for the formidable eleven that Everett has this year goes to Coach Earl (“Chick”) Clark. He fol- lowed Bagshaw as coach and met with fairly good success in his first }year, but last year his eleven was | below par. This year’s team car be j termed a success in every sense of the word. Everett's success in the year fol- lowing Bagshaw's departure was largely due to the efforts of George | Wilson and George, Guttormsen, the |present University of Washington backfield stars. Clark is an Everett man, playing on Bagshaw’s team back in 1911, or | thereabouts. He went to the Untver- |sity of Montana and helped to make | football history for the Grizzlies in their palmiest days. LORIN SOLON COACHING HERE Lorin Solon, one of the greatest fullbacks football has ever known, is now coaching the crack West | Seattle Athietio club football team. Solon, when he played for the Uni- | versity of Minnesota, was selected Jon the first All-American team by Walter Camp. |WEBFEET DUE HERE FRIDAY Oregon's varsity football team is expected to arrive in Seattle Friday morning for the game with Wash- ington at the stadium Saturday. The visitors will. work’ out in the afternoon at the stadium. ‘They are expected to stop at the Hotel Wash- ington. |IVAN JONES IS | . KICKING WELL | Ivan Jones, the former Franklin |high school football star, is per= forming for the West Seattle Ath- letic club grid team. Jones holds down the pivot job, and his punt- ing has been one df the features of the team’s play. SPOKANE GRID TEAMS BATTLE North Central and Lewis and Clark high schools of Spokane were ing their annual game in the In- Smpire metropolis today. It's the annual classic for Spokane. | TECH TO PLAY BEZDEK AGAIN Georgia Tech Penn State will be a feature of the Polo Grounds football card again next year, Bex dek’s players have won twice from the Southern eleven. Lame muscles? treatment You can keep your muscles from * stiffening up, and you can take out soreness and ache with Sloan's Linimen ery night stroke it om gently—you don't have to rub it in. Tense muscles relax—aching stops. Get a bottle from your druggist today—35 cents. Sloan’s Liniment—tills pain! panes Sn | a SS claim) work Alt iy ed tbe lene mon athle of th home neve Not was of thi drab Indiai ago which ship nificd of ro Wi curlin ball hold. up i at much ‘Thi esto gethel develd tion pitch, A disti land title, they anot repu ringl Fe fred fnine Mount other Scott forwa WI BO} Kra Basil eight light) over eight Pitts 131, dout. Va