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DAY, DECEMBER 1, 1925. THE : Morgan: Boxes Ballarino, McKenzie Will Make Debut Local Ring Men in __Aiter Title) Important Bouts Morgan Fighting for Junior Lightweight Title in Los Angeles and McKenzie Meets Buskins in Everett; Lomski to Fight Moore HERE won't be any boxing at the Crystal Pool tonight, because the firm of Austin . Bishop couldn't line up a main event, but three Seattle boxers will appear in im- ) High Scoring Features Commercial Cage Opening | vow. y mer Is [ F lournoy Is Star With Tulane Team Jer net Wi Wie H Buffalo | pit; . Pilot | First Seattle Coast League, Leader Lands Job in | in Easy i Game 'Seattle Hardware and H | Tractions Play Best : | + portant scraps in out-of-town battles this! International Loop e | Tilt we that will provide enough interest for} | ve the ri followers to buzz about for some EMEMBER Bill WINNING MANAGERS } time Clymer? c | All witting siansgers are ve 4 Tod Morgan, the classiest featherweight Baseball fans | quested to turn in the seore _ ieveloped in the West since the days of fe Fag Ph | of thelr games to the news poe 4 r 4 soda eattle Indians | papers, and also hand in a du pre Eddie Campi, gets his crack at a world’s back in 1919, witen | pileate copy 10 Nel Norquist, at | ngeles, meeting Mike Ballarino, the junior t city came | | Spalding’s, so records may be s, lightweight king. They fight 10 rounds Wednesday. | back jato Paes One Conference kept of the tilts, L i Coast league after | Bill McKenzie * he gai sce Mia eevenned ; by an absence, won't Grid Game Yet IRST games in Lonnie Austin, climbs thru the ropes for his first ring forget him in a | > fissthe Consume § test in Everett tomorrow night, meeting Charley Buskins, ec hurry to Be Played 1 Baskett aa a negro heavyweight from winters nen "i OrEpning REGON AGRICULTURAL ¢ 4 4 at * ? * > . overnigh an a team L were yed |. i Jeff Te sreau Is Vancouver, B. C., in a six- tle, one on the road COLLEGE, Corvallis, Dec. 1 _ Played last — He 7 af 7 But wehe Jed gam left in gat t oom oe , |;round affair. ity by request and another | : . a 4 se gyms « t} ; nfs t, breaks into fast company All in all, had more players | Me Biayy the | Ue : ed one- Pp || (ena night when he tackles Ted Moore on the roster that year than a ee Sasi) beee ls olde dsiecares ~ in & 10round go at Vernon | | Coast league club before. or sin og Gey ara Eker nd the best pect $ Moore, an sh scrapper, has | Well, Clymer, who has been de parses . a Pobis was - quite a reputation and a victory | ing odd Joba, h as scouting and riggs for seqome Ace: DanorR its between ya 4 t the Aberdeen bay | Bite eave ype here, ha: tande a ee In the South they call “Peggy” Flournoy of Tulane Uni-| jaye here Wednesday night five 1 the Puget Sound pm a is bel t favorit | position as manager of the Buffalo! ,,... 4 row tC |! ov Dailarin in thelr - : t ‘ os Internatior lu He ne versity the greatest all-round gridder in that section. ys 6 SON 25 Angeles? le b Ws a = e ino oir the ¢ iternationa ch us 7 ‘ ed by ‘arren th eyes cielo alias egies signed: for ¢ He’s a real triple-threat, being a fast, fearless runner,|'® Pay the Trojans, | cle Wren eran artes | too ‘clever’ for ina tne’ of Clymer was quite a card while on| €xcellent punter and accurate passer. In virtually all his viet Weisman was next to Li } t ft t ’ ‘4 ‘ { t { s uncle, | rushing ing type of fight bose am A‘ as ory of tt gre team's games this fall he haa been the outstanding tar, MORRIS QUI TS j Dincott, fn’ points “Koored, dimes 1 } ei tame ite | tle Redakins, but he never got by |— ee | Anderson's 12 points were the only | seball. Jeft MoKenzle, a 23$-pound giant, has| here very weil i G Y | things that kept P. S. P. & L. in 1 baseball Jeff r gia : | v _ rn the pres. || been taught the rudiments of the | Clymer had amaased a reputation | TA OMA CLUB) running. i ent time he is || fame for the past two monthe by |by winning a flock of pennants in an ew 0ac es ue or ‘om Morris, pro for the Fircrest THE LINEUP | in the Btgnth |] 4 and- the Seattle ring in- Mee 4 | Loulaville before coming West, He | jolt club of Tacoma, has tendered | esttle Haw. (36) 5 Bee | grade of |jstructor says he is ready for hia ms | was coach for the Baltimore Orioles his resignation to club officials and “ (ctmee < | grammar |i debut. There is always a lot of ‘roo MOR GAN Ant seanor | it will become effective in February, ¢ é i * s football ||#0 the boys «and girls will be ig. Pek Merwan MeCORMICK LANDS BERTH * tract | jons—Seattle Hardware, Ash- ; E wess {a | Watehing McKenzie’s showing fh | mec k present cham ‘OOSE’ McCORMICK, who ———~ - Morris w he pisces se hae B pe tae Sagan oe hai ; By i py ne isburg, Pa., club. Ne elis (4) for Ashwol P, Z i a fares being |) Everett @ 10-round go in Los An- was one of the famous pinch-|Montana, Oregon and Washington State Certain to/tt,! Harrisburg, Pa. club. No suc.) Welw (0 for Ammwoia. BaP, & 1 pred geles tomorrow 1 + Be.we| Hitters in the ors a decade ago, e 4 Pinte i habeas i i higagrade school DRAKE A ER i i : Baa aie sande tefesee te Have New Mentors; Idaho May Make Change; piace at secrest: clit | | aC the C } I t vw) : TEARNEY T0 Army baschall team at West Point Rumors Have Smith Leaving California coe \micacaee Th Sokee ad bonnamede \ (| scam, | | for next season S { his mates helped. hi A cy ssynenru | BIG- CONTEST ... ILE te Cost fata seaon has on nore exe | OMSK. WILL sm ete ‘ for his age and has ¢ | If permission can be gained from | RODGERS AT PEORIA AGAIN sf q O [Se este HEAD LEAGUE gitsscrricscun, Winsat seem tinee MEET MOORE | Van nce, Drake university manage the Peoria club in the; 2@¥, Several colleges are looking ta new eantiog: Hee the! vernon Shr oe raat | MAROONS WIN ia willing: to accept the bid from| KANSAS CITY, Mo. Dec. 1. Threel 1¢ again. Rodgers, who 1926 campaign. Dick Smith will step out} sx Northwest, and | pense Pea | Rhodes (0) 4 4 AND Jacksoavile, Fie.” to ge B opitentcy ha Wallan lacie oan a She Banrentento “ut at Oregon, Albert Exindine is thru at) Ted » ong ne an ~ Rapp ( 4 FIRST GAME epee oer i i cea paeeeagdl % it was decided at a meet-| ¢ = SECUN, tthe aul A Washington State and Click Clark has re-| *r° paps Kany bg Mt c fo wedale a rs 8 yet not name¢ . aed , city last summe mski is ra G 0 eh ii = Coach 0, M however, be. of club owners hei ster- rere . signed at Montana. ddleweights ever seen in| Banker G i Saree 4 SeCOUVER. B.C. ‘Lee! 3 ach O, M ver the best middleweights ever » Bank 3 Mcintyre » ER, ; < * a fh debra le hati s : ‘re P atty r te a big crowd Is ¢ Rhodes: Sm: ) : Vancouver's Maroons won their} Ueves the team should receive a/ LOUISVILLE S EX-BEE There are rumors that Matty Matthews! these par a big crowd ts ex Rhod a: Smith (1), for H VMMETT MUL Class AA company 4 former Salt Lake as last year. The| been purchased by Louisville of t with the| American association from Mobile Okiar oma}of the Southern league promoter to see the large guaranteo for the ‘benefit of | snation house, ‘ to the fact that Uni} 4 gia $ first game in the Western hockey league Monday night hy defeating | "*¥ fe the Saskatoon Crescents, 4 to 0. He points here. versity of Missour! was allowed to "Helio eaisis Mickey Mackay scored three of| DIAY on the Pacific Coast last sea. | Fames, the ws goals for the Maroons, and Mo- | In order to earn stadium funds, | Pere, cttien tallied the other. |OBERT NAMED. © |SiZpn7™ Wientts soe , CUBS TO KEEP GIBSON may not be back at Idaho after his disas-| pected by t trous season there, and that Andy Smith is| 4>*™°e"_bey in action | BAYLESS STARS considering an offer from Columbia uni-| r ‘ | With Bayless ringing 16 points, Black versity of New York, i\SCHAEFER fern bstvubethers tRA tha <a peed The new coaches that started out this! niga en Boag year did well enough, Howard Jones having DEFEATED it . Was the leading scorer THE LINEUP a powerful team at the University of South-| CHICAGO, Dec. 1—Edouard Hore- | Black Mtg. Nar ssuabemmancy = vate 4s ro the owners { 2 Chicago Cu i keep * o eene fe ee . Jones (2) K BURNS AS CAPTAIN sop Pian. gy rh eiggacch cools P| Au ern California in spite of its loss to Pull- | mans, the nsational cue ) F Be i erselie ‘TACOMA CARD Charley ‘Gltaon as coach nent | dee ern California ea te es pees 1 EVERETT. Dec. 1—Art Ob senso He took over the reins v e | present b world’s 18.2 | Fort G é Kilote | son ‘ ort. . MEETS THYE} Byerett high school will lead the 1s LINED UP when Rabbitt Maranville was given Clipper Smith did very well at Gonzaga. patkine championship, in the first Ric ginal ork eae ert hee — ~ a Erank | wulls a wes Nn ae aa | TACOMA, De : gate as pilot of the Bruins last) Paul Schissler, in his second year at O. A. C and] »! k of the point ‘match, | (1) ter Fert AB aceon: fe % Michigan, and Ted Thye | result of a meeting held yesterday |, Puyallup heavy- | summer | Pop 7 ast night. Thé.score was 500-301. | , mant of the lightweight mat)here. He succeeds Egbert Westrom. | 4 cot 5 peace Cx Pop Warner, in his_sacond season at Stanford, rank next) iN ‘wore matcher at $00 points | Mequannre RUNS WILD tle, will meet here Wednesday | ; ~ to Washington at the pres-| T each are to be played. eK GRANGE ng of the footba in the main event of Pro- ALL SEI Hamlin's benefit show at; Since th ne Heilig theater. The benefit is| season “Re: r Louis Pergandas, Greek wrest-/| 0% 100 invitations to speak at ,} of th day night The other PETERS BOOSTS || Select All-City —|,ent time BEES’ RECRUIT| Eleven Tonight | wottmam and oy wining tie cost) IN NEW ROLE championship and having a three- KOKOMO, Ind., Dec. 1-—Harold |. wr, a. (8) utual Fire Association, nm both gathered ope Grange has recel losers TUE LINEUP SAl CITY, Dec. 4 “LE Cot the sat all Pos. Fleischmann’s ( who lost his eyesight in al various athletic events. He has re-| *! the hee ee Be ia ths Tabsiae hurler ELECTION of the mythical all- |! ca, contract, Enoch Bagahaw is| (“Red”) the pride of Illl-|McGitford (4)... aah e last April. fused t them all. . hfe 7 ah A a eS if city prep team take place | sitting pretty at Washington | »i8, will referee the Kokomo Amer. | Rasmuasen (4) r McQuarrie (13) hia v ‘ who has been signed for next sea-|! tonight at the Y. M. GC. A. when Legion s¢mi-pro championship ao Potts (5) s and ty an¢ non by the Salt Lake Bees, hi the annual hi, school football papi fe athens Warman ee citait hia baat Gite G : aaa! aatelis Jones and Eddie Harris Irecetved several good boosts here || banquet will le held. The com . | Kame here, December 14, [Griffin + -@ oehetee Grfbbin ar tl be hel © col panes . aAaiitn® er hek Substitutions—N. Mf AL Rh —- Jby Johnny Peters, Beo catcher.|| bined Hi clute ot the an Await Reply anne As the r int f ths Fat ee F. A.) Rhodes tor Peters says ho never saw such!| have charge of the event game to charity, Grange has e KOENIG ONLY Rataral abilty” and speed ta" amox|| DAYS charee of the event, From Colgate | take that the foe that be might re Weiiae ake gi M recrult oY en cae PASADENA, Cul., Dec. 1.—Tourna-| ceive for refereeing also) go in. | Piper & Taft's lost to the Seattle e. | ESKIMO BACK ——~ - Gan Simer Tesreau.and || aot of: oupe officials waited today | Plumbing Supply, 2 to 0, by forfelt. WASHINGTON STATE COL- Geo: Wilson have been lined c 7 Yolgate prsity | | 1am Dec Jos Koe half ». Coach Harry Mitholin, of the |/0n ® rep! fre es bce hearth beird MOODY VICTOR See seine anligny ‘aievens in the WILL RETIRE ae mpion Wert Seattle team; ||88 £0 whether it will. accept the invi-| BROOKLYN, De c.1 OR WILL ENLARGE babes: tation to represent tle Kast in the °. only Eskimo football in a ta toa’ onship |] arnt Thetnton, captain, éadsw areee oot ¢| Moody, W serch nad aadigepheg ra Moines to a championship in the|| 1." Cassidy, principal, ‘will alse |j#8Aual intersectional football. batt t otball battle |> fi middleweight, sare POLO GROUNDS ss Western league last season, has in- | here New Year's day pointed Lou Chester in the 10-round} | sport and figured largely in W ‘4 ee) Seattle (here speak. ‘ at Risch kee atone feature bout at the new Broadway] NEW YORK, Dec. 1.—Be f Pete Ash w t = gagny Tp tal yp ba at SC. last “| tUmated that he will not return Colgate has been asked to play in Vion . - 1—Because o} building tei ets hia a aa Si par add Lit trea there’ ‘next. spring. The door 1s). Ct the ast West classic, but faculty /arena here last night jthe, large number of fans turned « a | urday. +g a elie ol re eae eb open tor ton, thy, tae Keree,| HAUSER BACK _ sbietio tre sid to be bowing 29| aa trom’ the" ArmyNary gne final match was or if Joe Swalwell| woke ‘up a few daya ago with COSTS ILLINOIS LESS peeeidant “of the Demony Aging! i tear ie Acie ain (hm decision of accestance or resec-| CALL OFF BOUT [last pe utay,, olflclalacatitis ole t | ALINOIS: LES sa ener f fe. lake nile the official aetion didn’t | jon |Grounds here are S heeame runner-up by default |had taste in their mouths. Thelr| Harvard's recent report was that | ‘hat be known during the leagu : Vacate BOSTON, Dec. 1.—Because of the |) yvmq fiir 2 ote {handicaps were slashed by the| it cost $84,000 to run a football! Meeting in St. Joseph jmean so much, the fact’ that Joo) If ‘Colgate sretuses ‘to come west,| ines of Jim Maloney, of South i ei diss “OF be Mb ationaca 4 Tournament “Manager Ed Davis} Rainier jury. campaign, At the University of | Hauser, first eman of the Ath bale ho anal be ne Beal Boston, his bout with Jack Sharkey. |/the game, but ee ar aaeae f ham't been able to get the low- |Tilinois slightly more than $29,000) Our experience with vegetarians | letics, has been reliatated means | @estern che speording to local! ot Brighton, has been postponed un. : 4 ‘ommitttemen. |sands were refused admission, » down on that mysterious final| Aside from playeng golf left-| was expended for football, including | has been very limited but wa sup-| that he figures on playing ball next |‘ rn | til Saturday, \ The new extend ; | Washington university's Pacific! ion’ is planned to match, and, believe Pete and Joe, | handed, wonder what Tom Shields | coaching and the equipment of| pose whenever one of them gets year, Joe is the hard-hitting chap | coast champions have been calactna | have the grounds hold 85,000 peo- he never will. | does for a living and when does) more than 300 hoys for playing the| peeved he puts a potato chip on) who broke a kneecap last spring. |co'the wrrmeen eneta but ane? LEADS “ARMY | pie and maybe more, In a pinch. Moa {De dost } ware. his shoulder, He was placed on the voluntarily | have not’ yet made official accept-| wr ee The sinking of a putt for a par| the last T POINT, Dec, 1—Tony! ey | retired iat following beng aprerid ance of the offer, Hewitt, formerly a University of} BIG PREP GAME ba at Inglewood | Hauser does not believe that the| — —— | eaten ‘ittsburg star, has b lected “vem |OUR BOARDING HOUSE BY AHERN | swe iiwr wit artis inthe Prtwure ta, han. men, select QN DECEMBER 5 tinue his journey to Bellingham | hey and ft | HONOLULU, Dec. 1.2The San slightest with his work tn 1926. Py | train. A missed putt would GETS CHANCE _ |tiwitt ts a 20 pound fullback | hool eleven of San ve meant—a long walk. | Mateo high | ST. LOUIS, Dec. 1.—Jack Adams. | Francisco, 4 et : PE, PONE TE TT “7 . WALTONS MEETING claimant of the’ army~heavyweight HEADS CRIMSON prep. toads ihe CalBelel en OW MRS. GARNEN' re Z u 4 A WOMAN'S | Dr, George Sparling will report} title, gets his first chance in the CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Dee. 1—|for its game with HAVE A LADY LIVING Miso ‘CHURCH, <TH’ ONIN BU TDA OF Ais Jon the pollution problems existing} Upper rounds of the hedvyweight|Clement D. Coady, of Here BY-THE HAME OF \DEAL MAN T KNOW OF HE SAW ONE |] IDEAL MAN?]] [in lakes and streams at the ed beats ssional fighting circles tonight} Mass., will lead the 1926 Charlie Carskadden, father of the ida club, is hoping that being Ptenident of the organization does ot mean that he is to fill up the c the Honolulu Newton, squad December 5, Twenty-five vard|members of the team are ready ‘ ae | December meeting of the Isaac} when he meets Jack Renault, Cana-| eleven. Coady has played at le} for the big int stional til divot holes on the Beacon Hill MADAME GULTANZA, WHO |] I@-THio HERE KINGTUT Waont HURT, GooD | Watton league tonight at the Cham-| dian heavyweight, in a 10.round bout |and fullback and is one of the best| the first of its. kind Natemoee : ) x) | 16 A MoNDERFUL THEY Sor DUG UP wm ie VE Fok |ber of Commerce assembly rooms, ! here punters on the Harvard squad. !Jocal football followers, TSR Cc AL GALER lw HES BEEN “TH SAME IER O y Converse donated an ad-| ein g ¥ \WE THOUSAND YEARS! dressing machine to the Inglewood Se “foLD ME OP FINE: COULD | ° fdib. Trouble keeping track of his NEGTERDAY, —THAT J + FORTUNE “TELLER “TOLD COLLect | ath Reta ee te cane WOULD MEET MY ® ME GEVENTEEN YEARG AGO || DAMAGES, ro OO a O Orse an OaCc Ing | Machine. | YDEAL NEXT YEAR f= “WaT I WovLD MEET MY j Ty \DEAL “100, ~~ Ai’ A FEW m (. By Henry L. Farrell Florida this winter. clated with professional football be. have made a public appetite for But for the fact that the alarm MONTHS LATER T WAG IN vt Rtn ey hei a AY To some of the Yale purists, | cause Yost is actually a profes-{ professional football. ‘The public 6 ‘cle last Buiday. ‘We A GTREETCAR ACCIDENT, | JN opinion," ‘Tom Callahan sald| Who look upon professional foot: | sional in football even tho his}. likes football and the public is AP referring to one C Kellison, AN Cf WAG-THERE T MET I rocently, iit Ga Be more “OtahoHar | ball as a thug's pastime, it was | playing days long have passed, not permitted’ to see the good not an auspicious comeback for | 1¢ jt js dishonorable for a player| College games. 4 Yale captain, but once away |to take money for playing as a| Conditions have reached such a from the classroom and out | professional, it Is hard to accept | stago that Army and Navy officials, fake ceiving fa pour AA aera to |the logic that it 1s honorable for! generously allow publishers of New. by coaching ‘allahan's philosophy, it’s every’ | a player to také money for coach-| York papers to “buy” a. certain football." man for himself. ing as a professional, ‘The~ only |number of tickets behind the goal Five yearg| Red Grange, the great Llinols| difference is in the class of service. | posts and outsiders insult the ath ago, ‘Tom Calln.| StF expressed the same theory in| ‘The colleges seem to take a high-| létic associations of the “Big ‘Three han would not|‘lfferent words when he sald brow attitude toward professional | colleges if they dare to suggest have to be fur-| “The same fellows on the campus) footbal, and go out ot their way|that they would ike to buy one or ther {dentified, | WO are tolling me now not to play! to criticize a game that has been! two seats, He was a great professional football, wouldnt lend | organized beyond criticism. ‘They captain of a) Me 4 five-spot in 10 years If I hap-! seem to think it ts a heresy to What's Wrong? great Yalo team, | Pened to be broke. play the game away from the at an all-American | “I have opportunitics to make mosphere of the campus and they guard and |More money than the average stu: | jook upon those who patronize pro major subject In| ent when he leaves college, and| football as barbarians of the dog tho news as in|! think it would be more honorable | fighting and cock-fighting days Popularly known as “Cappy.” BERTI o« A GORT OF BUSTED ROMANCE ¥ROM-TH’ FART le | able or more impure to take money | ‘for playing professional football than it is to Aubrey (“Hate”) Schuler, of Cheasty's, appeared on the links| ) With two new clubs—a lose-um!| | > tnd a wet-um | — | Playing with n badly sprained | 4 ® tack, Ed Crider had the best round he ever shot at Inglewood. His op )) Ponent, Al Schoephoester, was glad i. failed to register he might 4 H i a EA did not have a broken The best Mswer to argumenta against professional football is a question—"What is the matter with Dohnnie Gray was out on the Hinks jast Saturday as usual. Walt Munro, Jack Horner and Abe Were the rest of the foursome | for me e the one | There is no doubt that pro- a nals hash iehola' wire : one of the Big| for me to make that money at| pa qpery. Their bent shots we i Three gamen he} football, the only business 1 know | Schools Ri ible fossional football six yeass ago 5 Laed ARBRE iy playing} OW, than to capitalize my repute Schools AeAponsi bie Was not all that was desired ;, riage A Jeenter against his brother, Mike| ton selling bonds, insurance or} There is no doubt that profes: and it was pretty much of a & ro say hin pee Callahan, the Princeton captain, and| Teal estate, an undertaking that 1{ sional football has become estab-| roughneck game, but the class han Meir Lett “oA? hiss Goceeceiy Jal the Calinhans were there to| ktow nothing: of,’ | lished and tha@it is going to grow! of college players that are go- ; topped rr shots Sagar Hes ak ! woo it | “Ada! j48 & public entertainment as long | Ing into the game now was not ® } Pave them up un next summer | After he left college he slipped | Coaches Are Pros jas tt Is properly administered and) available then, «VA, into the obscurity of a bul@ness It is rather surprising to hear a] @% long ae college players of good The public always supplies the ‘| ® | world that has only a short memory | disintested party like Mielding Yost, | reputation are brave enough to 18+/ real ‘answer on professional sports Tf someone would only donate an for the greatest of heroes and he} the veteran athletic director and| hore the taunts and play if they} and the public certainly has shown “holt balarm clock to Golfer Gene Lutz | we popped back suddenly as the or | football coach at the University of | Want to play, ; by the gate receipts that it likes | A® would probably he able to got | iN Gro ARNEY DR DROPS Ne ganizer of & profexsional toam that | Michigan, expressing the hope that The colleges are responsible — | ond will patronize professional foot. | OM deck in time to get toodup with GAP 10S — \y to play a series of games In’ Grange would not become asso! dircetly for the condition which — | ball, rey ‘ ’ ry s