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PAGE 14 ATTLE STAR TUERSD 1Y, NOVEMBER 1 ‘W’ TEAM TO FACE TRICKS Andy Smith Will Have Usual Line of Fast Stuff Saturday jg Berkeley Great to making a Coas champ! o Skin they will be up gainst spin plays, quick kicks, rever plays, fakes a the rest c Smith's stuff. face & fast charg: pretty fair c Jabs and Yc Stanford the Cardin fensive w they witl and a couple of plungers in of that stuff, but of the used that kind of their own terri the Bears won't be day is to keep kicking, Jetting the enemy play with the ball ter walt fe the en uF precision and for 2g man football is to follow the ba every man to hit his opp: hard and smash pla ean get started. th has two fine backs in Imlay and DL both fas ‘and experienced. Carison, Young and Jabs are all expertenced, too. Smith's line misses Horrell at cen fer, but he has his usual tricky, capable line Huskies Improve the Nebraska game the Huskies were guilty of bad football in that they didn't follow t that cost them a victory. They improved in the Pullman game and in the Stanford strug- gle they were almost perfect In this respect. ‘The Huskies, to a man, last Satur- . well, day how that results. That is where their chan California rest, as they have to fol low the ball. Experience Helps ow htontmabied against the Callifor- mia formations, particularly in the secondary defense, will be a great help to Washington tn the champion- whip struggle. Elmer Tesreau, George Wilson, George Guttormsen and Harold Patton have all faced that tricky attack and should be better equipped than ever to meet it. And Washington's line, made of| mostly new men, may lack some of| the experience of last year’s forward | wall, but the present combination {s charging faster than ever. A fast- charging line will break up more tricks than anything else on the grid- | fren. o- Mell Is Fine End Snooky Mell, California has one Poe the finest ends In the West. A good pair of ends in this day of open football, with its maze of running plays, will do much in breaking up an offensive if they’re smart, Smith has a faculty of devfloping | good wings. Muller, Berkey and Stephens are some of the ends turned out by him. Huskies Work Late ONG after darkness had settled | over the Stadium field last night, Bagshaw drove the Huskies thru a| strenuous workout. They confined | most of their activities to golng thru | signal drilis. Everybody weathered the Stan- ford game in pretty good shape, and there were no absentees last night. ‘The team will work here today and tomorrow and entrains tomorrow night for Berkeley. PUCKSTERS TO PRACTICE PORTLAND, Noy. 10.—Pete Mul- doon, manager of the Portland hockey team, will send his men thru their first workout of the season here tomorrow afternoon, The Hose Buds open the season with Vancouver in the Northern elty November 23 and will make their first home appearance two days later. Muldoon has signed Joo. MeCor- mick, of the American hockey team, {n exchange for Art Gayne, who will go to the Edmon ton club 32Rés. BOXING 32 Ris. TONIGHT FIRST BOUT 4:30 SHARP CRYSTAL POOL Becond Avenue and Lenora Street National Athletic v BUD RIDLEY vic “KING nu PREDDIE MACK ™ CAL HERMAN‘ | HARRY WHYBROW 6 Nas. i JOE MARCUS HENRY GEYSEL vs. Nas, JOE POWRLL And Two {Mound Pretimin 2—-OTHEN FAST BOUTS — Tickets on #)'" at Drugman's, 1425 Fitth Ave; Jee, Dizard’n, Occidental and Yealer; Groce's Clear Btore, 1106 Third Ave.; Jini Paraley'n, Second and fene Aust & Halt, Ine, 1630 Ninth Ave, corner Olive, 2.20 “Theserved $1.05 egeigy oo f wal Admission $1.10 by Ine, before it | i Olympte | Like Gladiators im the Roman Arenas By Leo H, Lassen renas of Rome to fight othe ing Fomans to ata Wilson v «car off times starved Hons L . P ' two of his teammates, Wil ‘Hecause they wanted th ry of conquest; the red Blood nt every ounce of his husky young strength to the foot in’ the veins of youth ands the physical expression of it i Woe Washington, apd he fe able to Ni ind ip Raga AP 5 ¢ As the} were carrying W to the sidelines A thousands of young Frenchmen followed ple, and many a ¥ tt nument Ps | y the world do t young fellows go In . | football, w all t eet of it ina r a ft riendships per and a ey get the impression that football ts a means of inciting territ . timea? You « + ped warfare, ‘but ey this spirit of play It in the love of t | MB ¢ money to get out there and take it 1 the stands, packed with humarty even as the old Coliseum | Ar ter went “cr nds ago, applauding or turoing thumbs down aw ¢ asked him wh and the love of meeting @ man on equal terms and testing your strength Cardinals wer f hun against his dre f red c ye th ut the United ‘Football has that as its vital drawing power. Bome go into States were d the name thing every fall, and it for the personal gain that the fame on the gridiron might Bagshaw, who loves football as much, or more, than bring them in after years, but the percentage te very, very any t ving, answered small, That kind usually fails when the test comes. The great For the same reason that the young Roman football player ia the man who plays for the love of playing ys. In the time of the Caesars, buckled on Football, too, br loyalty to a common cause; it brings out the WILSON swords, picked up thelr shields and spear very best there is in the boys that play it. Playing on a team ‘Player Lim te their of May Also Carry Two Men of N Not More Than Two Years’ Experience in Suggested for Litt ACRAMEN TO, Cal, Pacific Coast Sairia: Monday, failed to ed of proposals te Lake clubs so as t fans with continuous baseball. Harry Williams, was no discussion | Lake club to Los Angeles and the Vernon club to San e experienced players, together | with a host of new aspirants and the usual quota from the freshman team last spring, ara. practicing nightly in Harmon 18 Veteran n Players le World’s Series Big (Big Football — Meni in West [Opies mm 1 ft Nebraska defeat it Is Cut to unt by Class AA Ball; Plan remarked: The at foothall are x players in Ne- | Nov. —Directors of the braska. They | in aie meeting here have to have | take action on the much talk- atiak teaat | » move the | Vernon and Salt o furnish San Francisco bay league president, said the regarding moving the Salt for entertainmen " minor league convention at Cat Island, January 12, 13 and 14 “Cal Ewing, president of the Oak With Recruits Tough Breaks | p to win, if it can be done fa i | SOTTMHAT love of conquest, that willingnes® t he | their goam is something t m You. may start all of the fe football leagues you. ca and you'll never have of ' take ance | gaff and play the game like t colleg yo 5 “Gridiron glory 1s bought at a stiff price. It means weeks and weeks of hard training that makes or breaks (he sin their | efforts to make the squad And then come the games. You ¢ money to play lke thone ngton fellows fended their goal Ii at f They w playing to win; they we Washington, Its P ld tradi tions and were sacrificing for each er. Hore never showed more courage on the Tiber bridge than those Inds did last Satur de t is my answer to ‘Why American college youths play foot fall? { | COAST LEAGUE MEETING TURNS OUT TO BE TAME ooo Bargai n On| New Chicago Cub Leader in Pool Show 32 Rounds Billed for Ring Fans Here Tonight TS bargain the ¢ big decided siders t Kot and put rin night; promoter * nomething you can't be sure of when they impor prima donnas Bod Ridley, to he t these whore main claim to of Boxing | Nate Druxman | hoarted the young | has | "7 | Francisco, Williams express- ROCHNE fobs etal abl | ed the opinion that the moot- ta what Rockne nd fights and | 5 CAGE VETS ed changes probably would not/|| sald. The University of Nebraska two four-round come before the sessions at all. He || #4 ya impor But ers | characterized this morning’ meet-|| they boast husky athletes else n are warned to hide ON BEAR TEAM ing as peac nd decidedly har. || where than Lincoln in that state an ther. won't 6 monious. ys claim to hav Joc if the program runs the NIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA,| ‘The directors reduced the playe in Il player in |) full Sen ‘anne ‘aH yaaa e iterate Si ingetemprecnie 3 Kersenbrock With Freddie Mack, Joe Powell and oat nL Le Men eligible | limit to 18 veterans and two men of! sie’ only ¢ feet 11 inches in his Jones, who have shown K. O to form the nucleus of the es lie more th wo years’ experience the fans may go home at basketball squ t season, the| in AA bane Tho old player limit i li’ ikki ibis Sac tena’ Wo: there's Fakity chances for California to retain its| ¥%* 20 ¥ waters. || Kersenbrock is a wander. Rival ||" : ed for the benedicta to get wor | title as champion of the Pacific! under |] teama inatst the football rules po ti rt } When you scan | Coast are exceptionally bright he Inter ia apealt' tha ko fot to VRae YOU a veterans, headed by C: Ye American when pi Spat : Holmes, forward hte gee ant ards or Gene nae Gates wueid? = “eipatne was favored by nd Watson, forward ,.| Yankees Have 2h I fight, | symnasium.|iand club, was named chairman " F EVER a major league club had | fame of jate was staying 12 rounds “Nibs” Price will again coach the| the entertainment o mittee a tough break with its college| Wh Kid Kaplan in the taco of ne- Bears In the cage game. —— pars players it's the New York} ree opponition, returns to the home é F h to fight Vic King. The Price {2 a busy man these days, rsa ase | heat King. working with Andy Smith on tse! CALGARY HAS | Ever since the Glants acquired | ‘Me.t0P spot, ee ae football field in the afternoon and| the great Frankie Frisch from Ford ner: Doute. follow reddie Mack = y Wh with his basketball charges in the ICE WEATHER ham dhs WERIMAE haven't pacebed sto, Mack vs Cal # rma. i Harty Why. | evening. ALGARY, Alta, Nov. 10.—[a likely prospect in the college | oye oe 3 ay Sir eg red | Over fitty aspirants are out for| Weather conditions here for tice! ranks fear he might be an-| pis, Brock: Bi ty J ia * youn jthe freshman team under Harold} hockey are much Improved over | other Fr Weaver : ; | Belasco, assistant coach, who 4s/ last year and with the late sea-| One the biggest lemons the firet bout goes on at $30 p. m.| handling the reins until Clint Evans| non, the ice will be in good con-| Yanks ever dabbled with was Kil-| = } is relieved of his duties as football} in for the opening. Coast clubs| linger of Penn State, one of the} mentor of the first year team. have artificial ice but prairie teams] greatest of football players, aiso/ FRYE LEAVES ber ree Tan NR RS Nias 4) 7 depend hetar natural rinks. lequaily successful in college base. '/EHMKE MAY GO }is said to be dissatisfied with con ditions at Boston and the owners of the club are known to be peeved |at his poor showing last season. | He should prove good trading ma terial. ball circles. j Killinger cost plenty of money, aa FROM MAJORS MAT MATCH Seia ate taodte, a Loman State, 3 darell alt In all probability the Boston Red IS POPULAR | George tains of Tinos and any Sox will try to put over a deal] PORTLAND, Nov. 10.—Tod| number of others this winter that will mark the|Thye's wrestling card here Wednes-| However, the costliest Investment | passing of Howafd Ehmke, day night will bring Robin Reed| of all was Pitcher Charley Ca pitching ace of that club. Ehmke/and Robert Krause together in the! of Princeton. A phenom tn c event 09, m he cost the Yanks a fancy The bout {# attracting much interest among mat fans here | figure as Reed is a pupil of Thye's, Caldwell showed nothing as Sata pitcher. In batting practice one day he hit Walter Pipp in the head and practically ruined his BIG THREE IS Later Caldwall was cut lo FARING BADLY « s worth a half dozen ¢ career Pipp GRID STAR IS With the footballs ‘ | | eason only | ‘i | COACHING WELL | vou: nait over, the Bie Three | ayn Pitening Doubtful aah Harry Stuhldreher, former star| Harvard, Yale and Princeton, have| J ict of hitting if they are to fig | quarterback at Notre Dame, fs do-| suffered far more than their usual | ure in the American league pennant ling very well tn hin flent year as! number of defeats, Harvard hay|race text season. The pitching coach at ila ova ls worst 9 «still doubtful and unless setback ao far has been a 13-2 de-|@retdy lost three games, while pest ot ihe veterans show a re feat by the strong Dickinson team.| Princeton has been trimmed by Col-| sue to form the team will nec Villa Nova beat Rutgers, 20-0, } | | 9 AND IMTERESTING WANG A-THESIS oN THE SUBIECT le ee “Ai OUR BOARDING HOUSE 1 DOUBT MADAME GULTANZA, \F You WILL FIND A MAN Z WHO HAS HAD HIS FORTUNE “TOLD |!) GO MANN GTRANGE I WAVE, EGADI~ HM-Mw BY “THE FAKIRG OF INDIA, + SAND READERS OF ARABIA AFRICAN ITCH DOCTORS, i] GNOW GALERS OF ICELAND GRUESOME SKULL READERS OF BORNEO.~~ MY WORD SOME DAN I MUST Write zy € MKIORS PRET WOULD BE MORE WIERESTING and Yale has lost to Penn.| lot of runs. BY AHERN Aes Wa io | gate, f 1 WouLD AWA LODIAC MY Like. He BE A CAMERA, FORTUNE PLEASURE OF FOR ALLT Kio), [| TOLD BY 7H’ FORECASTING ~ BUTT CAN Lee ahas YOUR FUTURE, “TELL HER, THAT , he" HES UPER TH’ |] “THEN CouLD SOME “TIME MiJOR HOOPLE! I CA) GEE Nou ARE UNDER TH’ ZODIAC INFLUENCE OF Ghar FARIS! A SEE WS FUTURER | FOR 40 DG, A \r He DIDNT MOVE ON f+ WFLUENCE OF HootcH Most OF tH! “Time t- fd & &g not | ner starred OREGON TEAM or AGRICULTURAL COL. I ‘ov 10. Clayton Frye. former student and part-time in. structor of boxing here, has been named as head instructor for the Los Angeles Athletic club. His ap pointment followed the resignation of George Blake, who has been with the LA. A.C, ¢ the war U. A. C. ELEVEN EASY WINNERS and How. wells, ard tearing off big gains thru the | Mercer With Adama, O’Brien line, the defeated the M Mercer Sunday University A. C. 63 to for the losers A. Ay at Springer and War | swatting won JOE McC ARTHY After piloting the Louisville year, job as manager of the Chicago Cubs. American association this y sam tht ot Ty +t SESRSRSSEREREEESE Rees to the title in the McCarthy landed the Colonels Joe swing several deals before the spring training season starts. He disposed of Rabbit Maranville to the Brooklyn Dodgers | yesterday. tting of Joe Harris added at three more years to his career an a big leagu serlen east Harris, always a good bataman but slow of foot and none too cer had as an field r, hits ¢ regu trout min An a ma all s played rst bake or American saw Harris murder the Pittsburg pitching, will be Joath to let him get out of the league even after tt s he is thru as a Right-handed batters can get distance their drives are in great demand in the majors, par ticularly in the role of pinch-hitter. It looks as {f Joo's world series him a berth tn * winning a alti the majors Joe the roles, outfield managers fact, jer during big tent, either at career un utility in the has league who noe! player who role. Basketball Guide, With Rules and Records, Out HE annual edition of the Spalding Basketball Guide, with the revised rules for the current season, has made its ap- pearance and is compiled with the usual care that characterizes other volumes of the series. The outstanding changes In the basketball rules for 1925-26 are those abolishing the hand dehind-the-back, on jump DbAll and the gonl zone, It was felt that these changes could be made safely under prosent conditions and that they would meet with the approval of the great major- ity of those interested in the game, Under the new jump ball rule It {8 @ personal foul for a player to Interfere In any way with his opponent, and this has spectat reference to the hand not used in tapping the ball, To avoid this foul players should try to keep this hand in the plane of the body. An appendix to the rules, in _the form of questions and an. swore is provided, and has been found of great value in clarifying doubtful points, The complete rules section is bound in the de- tachable style which renders {t convenient for pocket use, . Considering the comparatively short porlod since the invention of the game—about a third of a century—basketball has reached a high standard of scientific play in loss time than other sports of aimilar popularity. A big advance was made several years ago whon the rules committees of the three organizations most prom!. nent in the government of the sport—the Young Men's Chris flan assoclation, the National Collegiate Athletic association “and the Amateur Athletic union formed a Joint commtitee and adopted a uniform code of rules, thus oliminating variations in play which if persisted in would have been hard to eradicate later Great credit is due the members of this committee for the close attention they have given to the progress of the game and their quick response to any indication of necessity for changes that would result in. betterment of play. The officers of the committees are Willlam Ball, chairman; Ralph Mor- gan, treasurer, and George T. Hepbron, secretary, with Oswald Tower as editor, An {mportant factor seminating correct on the rules is the annual Inter- pretation meeting held by the committee, which is attended by coaches, officials and players, at whieh doubtful points are dem- onstrated and explained, those meetings being repeated dy seo tlonal bodles in every part of the country, thus rendering the ad- ministration of the rules uniform everywhere. in dis. information Contributions to this year’s ts. suo that are especially interest- ing are Ralph Morgan's history of tho Intercollegiate Basketball league, a comprehensive account of that organization's activitios since it was founded; a chapter on officiating by A. E. Motzdort of Rochester, who has been iden- tified with the game for many years, and an article on the of fects of basketball on high school players, written for the Guide by the inventor of the game, Dr, James A, Naismith, Tho reviews of the season com- Prise an account of the gamo in every important sectional asso. clation, reports of individual or- ganizations, records, interschol- astio basketball and the ap- Proved Iist of games officials registered with the committes. Tilustrations as usual are an in teresting feature of the Guide and embrace groups of leading teams in the arena of collewe and school basketball, besides others, of prominence in the organized kame. r po} The second game of the Big Three (?) at New Haven Satur- ing Yale. The} jneavy favorite to win. |. Dartmocth and Chicago provide the big Intersectional game of t y, altho of the Maroons nm and | taken some of the drawing er away from the Chicagoans, Alabama and Florida tangle in one of the big games in the South. | Altho Montana beat Idaho, the Gri } los would be He is planning to| [HARVARD TAKING TUMBLE Crimson Falls From Lofty Perch in Eastern Col- lege Football By Henry L. Farrell tem for 4 and an ¢ and brainy been felt at Cambr of Harv ure as the royal ho’ tdge ‘ard footba! There times in ot the Mahans, the were becor buried 4 an eve type | est t Yel in just » few years Har vard football has collapsed. Perey Houghton, founder of the system that was credited with the re sponsibility for Harvard's sue cess, turned to other professional fields and dled later just when he was beginning to make a suc in he old grads 1 shouted for a e blood of the coaches thelr heads!" they yelled ngdom for some football play- on st be some reason why f ot attract the boys who se from prep school to Yale and Princetonyeto Dartmouth and Penn- a and to any number of small. Why? advantages are as good at Harvard— nan at any othér big the fons that de among the student body idge surely mre as valuable are at Yale or Princeton thaps the tuition and the overhead at Harvard restrict the student body to boys of wealthy families and the social exactions confine the undergraduates to the offspring of aistocracy, but there are plenty of athletes with money and family behind them at Yale and Princeton and other big universities. HE educat aKsoc as t It ts 1p to Harvard to find the reason, and it is beside the point to discuss here because theories always solutions and only s in pain over the situation. 1 has been beaten three in a row by Dartmouth, and an article in a recent of the Harvard Alumni Bulle- beat Harvard meet in the future changes are made at There must be some reason. heorle re not years necording to fesue tin, Dartmouth will every time they unless some Harvard. Only two avenues of escape from the Dartmouth oppression are open— either quit playing Dartmouth or get * a better team than Dartmouth. Different Now ARVARD, while holding the whip hand, forced all the radical re forms that were adopted by the Big tlien will go into the game with U, 8. C.|Three to forestall some imaginary | Saturday on the short end of the betting. | rooks upon which football was arr | headed, Oregon and 0. A. C. meet tn thelr an- nual game Sat The mucb-abueed “Harvard club pla: st Brown this week. that | The A ad Columbia should pat on jan interesting game in New York. Detroit and Washington and Jefferson | play another {mportant intersectional game in Honry Ford's hangout. | Georgia Tech and Georgia clash Satur | aay Michigan and Ohio State meet in the ine kame th the Big Ten. | Minnesota and Town cl ia ial game iy the ss h in another conference. Notre Dame's globe trotters meet the strong Carnegie Tech outfit at South | Bend. | pRenparivania and Pittsburg play at Philadelphia for the championship of | thetr atate. | Purdue and Northwestern get to- | wether, Srrncese v8, Colgate, both unbeaten, | should be a thriller Williams and Amherst meet in their | j Annual classic | Connie Mack to Change Infield | > intievers, The tall eaane cea | leader of the Athletics insists he wants only large-sized infielders in the future, from 5 feet, 9 inches to 6 feet being the ideal height, Ty Cobb, on the other hand, ts rather partial to the half-pint sized inflelders, Ho regards Jacklo Tav. ener, who is the smallost infielder in the American league, the equal of any of them in fielding, Mack has had the six-foot in. flelder in his thoughts for somo time, It ts said after he watched tho brilliant play of Wright and Traynor of Pittsburg, he was con. vinced more than ever that the rangy Infleldor has the edgo, Mack not only figures the big fellow has the advantage tn the field, but also dopes it that oxtra poundage and height tends to give him more punch at the plate | | The — old-fashioned prizefightor, |who used to telegraph his punches, now has « sheikish son who broad. casts his ® | to play intersectional games and that | fluenced It was Harvard, according to general understanding, that cracked the whip and forced Yale and Princeton into an agreement limiting the time at which prac- tice could be started before the season, Now Harvard, from official under- | graduate and alumni sources, admits the failure of its idea and wants it changed. Yale and Princeton, suc- ceeding very well under the same conditions, may refuse to Jump thru the hoop now to help out the former dictator of the triumvirate. Sarranirs Not So Good ys Y in the season, Harvard suggested that {t was a bad pol- tending toward professionalism. an eastern conference should be or. ganized and should play a schedule upon which no outside team would appear. * If Harvard does not improve, eastern teams might not want her as a weak sister in a confer- ence and teams from other sec tions of the country would not want to be accused of picking a set-up. Harvard's policles seem to be in- largely by existing condi. tions and dictated by a winning or losing football team. failored Trousers