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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1913)
TIIE 3IORMG OKEGOXIAX. 31QDAY, UKUE31BKK V9, COAST NOT IN FEAR OF OUTLAW LEAGUE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ATHLETE SIGNED AS PITCHER BY PORTLAND NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE CLUB. GHT H ivrpr.w BY STRONG ENEMY JL YEAR Long Playing Schedule Proof Against Federal Raid, Is McCredie's Opinion. Federal League's Activities Recall Days of Baseball ' War of 1901-02. TINKER DEAL WISE MOVE "PAT" RAGAN IS TEMPTED OUTLAWS AWAIIED j , ! m sa aa aa mh aa aa aa mil aa aaa wAw aa aa Wfy aa aa aa U Mi sa aa aa I Star Pitcher of Brooklyn National Hub S; To-Vf Contract at Increased Salary Mar Canie Him to Jump. 0AH. Xrk. Oee. iS- -H.t" HMgrnm. .tar pitcher .f tke Brok.lT- Rati-- 1 .'Crtarr. ..de t. Ms. T Federal m-l.l. tlrru krrc -Tfc, Federal, offered e w-yar ,-.tr.rt at a n,urh ketter 1-ry tUmm th, Br-oklr- el"h " P",d fce uU dT- CHICAGO. 0c. I SpeciaL Fed Aral l.tacu" activities of the past lew .'"v. f-. .he "war days" of an when th. American League " ,h .National circuit an "nally '"""ced a working agr-ement under which or-.ni.-d baseball has operated sine The Federal case deffer. only in , th a ..ronrer fo- awaits the new organi-a-tion than In 11. ,. The American league grew out of th. old Western League, of which LAon Bancroft Johnson was th. presl , He. with Chartea Comlskey. ;iU'.ha ;T..r"-tJu conce..ion ' n"ow.n . onfi.aey to play hi. team n .Mco. but b. wa. rbldden .ou.e ihat "tile name White Sox wa. first ES wed... Not only did Johnaon ,.Tm.kg Joint war on th. National U"f,"'Arir. Ad , A deaf ear wa turned to this, and .lA...lTn. of th. W.-t.rn In thla city on October 11 and 12. 1. t'nVnam. American l-" ? am 11 Wr t?:r"c:sf and hle.u..d ,T-Unr.t "pneavLl l r"ld.nt Hart, of in'. "".."National ..ue c.ub gave 1,1s consent to .uch a move, out lai. -"lVhtnthiol.naon publicly announced the transfer of the t- Paul club. Psl Hart said he would not give con nt Vo such a proceeding. Johnson ,nen charged him with bad faith and ,fte" ........ mvde Chicago, even at r,,rcoSt oV withdrawal from th. Na ..agreement, unde. - which th. old Western league had opera ed. This Johnson-Hart feud was ,7 1900. when the American V asreed to buy the ball park at Cleve- UThls agreement embodied other thin It wa drawn up In legal form by Harts attorney and .up.equ.ntly approved by Johnson. Hart was em powered to ac, by the National Leau Under this agreement right w granted the American League to place f tab" in Cleveland and Chicago. This miclh;o.CC.andf1ndT."napon. I ,rol" Milwaukee. Buffalo Kansas City and Minneapolis. Grand Rapid" St. Paul were lopped off. Old Hooka Am Ctoaed. After the 1900 " ";hl(Ln marked by success, the American As.o- iation bugaboo still both.red. AC cordingly th. American League startad what eventually proved a th'" for the National game. A meeting was he'd her. October 14. 1900. and th. hU Vt the old American League terk. 'rlLl wa. th.n dyJWt. SotctirsVn; -.Lag- had determined wT.1'::- renew th- American League ap-pl ca Honor National agreement protection for "ml and thus forced the new agree- mm t- ' JIOI.AM.A JIVE IS DEFEATED M.I-ooghKi. Clab, of Portland. Win. Victory Easily MOIaAUaA, Or. Dec, I-f V&UnTiVV Molalla Giants here last night 67 to U Although th. visitor, w.r. out weighed more th.n 14 pound, tc .the man their abll.ty to shoot basket. amased the Homo-team. f..-.- amasra mo nutntet. was IVXr fc.VlW MgUWrod 13 .ld baJke ."d four fouls. Captain Toomey, of the Tisitors. scored six field basket I or the locals Beck nd Fredericks did 'This' irh. third straight win for .he 1-ortland player, and on N' ' r' iav th.y will play th. Nary Blues of Colton. Or. The teaina lined up as follows. McLou.hlln . r-rae'-:::::. S::::::::::c .-c.pta.Beck 1cb. G Trecko jimythe u irTHKI. WINS JfOTORBOAT RACE starters lu Tacoma Yacht Club Con test I-u Close TojreUicr. OLYMPIA. ash rec. IS. (Spe cial ) The KthU with John Bloomqulst .Hipper; won the holiday we.k motor hoat race of the Tacom acht Club.. Th. s.vcn carter, which left Tacoma this morning were nicely handicapped, the lael boat being less than la rolnut.s behind th. winner. The Corsar. flagship of th. flet. with Commodore Perkins aboard, nntxhed second. ..i, Th. Warnlek. scratch boat, wnicn flnUhed last, made the best tlm. of th. run. three hour, and it minutes. HarrUbtirg Win .nd Loee. HARRKBrRG. Or, Dee. IS-(Spe- ti.l WILrrlsburg high .cliool lost a r . .... ..... i HIlfoantain nn the Utters floor hy .cor. .f 14 to )l en Friday Bigni. i'n ....... Harrtsburg won from Monro, at Mon ree. ! to - I .... & ti - : ' ' - ' - s . -i - ' 1 - - r-'i (, :' ' I ' HOMER JAMISON IS SIGNED University of Oregon Boy to Pitch for Portland Colts. DUGDALE'S GRIEF LASTING! Portus IJaxter, CJonservntive, Says Seattle May Jump to Coast Any Time Mullen Must Pay or Play With Lincoln. Homer Jamison, ex-University of Oregon all-around athlete. 1. th. latest to be added to the list of prospective Portland baseball stars. Jamison was signed yesterday for the Portland Northwctsern League team. He la a southpaw pitcher and twirled last year for the La Grande and Fendieton team. of th. Western Tri-State League. At Oregon 'Jamison, who is a Port land boy, won his letter In baseball and In basketball. He played first base for the lemon-yellow, but after leaving school a couple of years ago branched out as ft pitcher. After short snrlit wun vvasmng ton State League clubs he was tried at Seattle and later worked out with th. Vcnic. Tigers during a couple of their visits in Portland. "Jamison pitched brilliant ball for La Grande last Spring." said Scout Richardson. "He won six of their first seven victories. "hen La Grande quit th. league he went to Pendleton. 1 think he will make good with . ven geance for Nick Williams." Manager Williams has on his staff Eastley, Martinoni, Callahan, Hynes. Stanley and Jamison, besides one or two recruits. ... It will cost Charley Mullen' close to 11000 to secure his release from the according to Prexy Hugh Jones, now a visitor in los Angeiea. jono Mullen cost Lincoln approximately $1000 and if he want, to manage the Vancouver Northwestern League club he thinks' it fair that Mullen reimbursfe Lincoln for bis release. . D. E. Dugdale, Seattle Northwestern League franchise owner, is still in a frrouch as a result of the cold shoulder soino of his colleagues gave Seattle in the schedule drafting here a few days So deep Is Dug" gloom tnat I SPORT-NEWS THE declaration oi in. dw -Stat, boxing commission that Bob Fitxslmmona Is too old to be al lowed In th. ten-round game there roust have been a sad blow to the Ruby Australian. . Somehow or other it seems like re tribution tor th. answer Fits sent to John L. Sullivan y,-,, -.,--.rrr". shortly after Flta f . "5Vt licked Corbett at f , v - .! . . .a . . Vn.lr Carson City. Sul' llvsn ttirea mm: r - t . .... ' 'V -Mr. Bob mi- - - simmgns I liT f tam; about decided to - return to the ring. ? ? . , Will vou give me a 1 ) chance to fight tor the championship I i held so long?" .-- ; I Fitzsimmons tele- fc.. craphed th. follow. . , ng reply: "Mr. John L. SullWan It pains m. to .-mi h vim sr. suffering from fatty degeneration of the heart." Fitxsiminons recently combed over .... n. .. knn anil. da. SDlte hi. fil years, decided that he oouiu licit any one oi in. uuucu i forfeit 1090. Here Is Bob's inventory of the whit, hope brigade: " "Gunboat" Smith Apparently beat of lot: has hard punch, but no defense. Could make him stop with the first solid blow t landed. Arthur Peik.y Saw him In action about a year ago and had to laugh. J.ss Wlllard Blow and awkward as aa old c.w. Has no fighting spirit. So tall that he Is hard to reach. But a good puncher could doubts him up and then knock him out with ease. Carl Morris All right, excepttng for ... -. ... h. ka.alliliu at all about fighting. So awkward that he get. tangled up. in hi. own reel. It would be a sham, to tak. the money from CarL "Battling" JLvinsky Rather rlever. but hasn't th. wallop people credit him with. Also doubt hi. ability to take a solid punch on th. point. "Boer" Hed.l-a-ii best hand is his right. Feci sorry for his left. C.a't hit hard enough to burst a paper bag. JAJinSOX. Baxter, .porting editor of the Post-ln-telllg.ncer, a conservative, comes forth to remark that "Seattle can get along without Northwestern League ball and it now look, as if a mistake had been mad. in sticking tot it so long." Continuing. Mr. Baxter .ays: -In some quarters it is now taken for granted that the combine against Seattle mean. th. sudden entranc. of Seattle Into the Coaet League. Thla Is getting a little ahead of the game. It 1. tru, howev.r, that the attitude of President Dugdal. and th. fun. of Seattle in general ha. experienced a sudden change. Th. Northwestern League Is weaker In its' hold on the r,,.. n f!'tv than It has been .inc. 190", ..artfC ZS?'wtSZ1X spit, the rules and regulations oi or ganised baaebalL" Medford and Grant. Pas. to Meet. GRANTS PABS, Or, Dee. 28-(3p8- FRJXCTPAI. STAKE WINNERS OF 1913. Trotting. Kentucky Futurity Ktawah Horaemaa Futurity Etawah Hone Review Foturltf .Don Chenault Champion StalUoa Stake ...Pon Chenault K. and At..... Reusens Transylvania Cheony Charter Oak Tenara, Paper Mills Tenara King George V Tenara Furniture Manufacture!'-. .. .Tenara Empire State Lord Dewey Michigan ...Lord Dewey Hoster-Colurobus Lord Dewey Matron Dillon Axworthy Horse Breeder Fut. .Dillon Axworthy Kentucky Fut. 8-yr.-oIds).Peter Volo Horse Review Futurity (2-year- eldi) Peter Volo Walnut Hall Cup Fan patch Castleton Cup Anvil October Prise R B- Ohio Marigold Tavern 6teak Eulabel Buckeye Lady a rattan Pacing. Chamber of Com. .Frank Bogash. Jr. Tennessee Frank Bogaah, Jr. Syracuse ..Frank Bogaah, Jr. Comstock Leata J. Burdlck Hotel lta J. Hotel Hartman :Leata J. Kentucky Futurlty.Homer Baughman Horse Eevlew Fut-Homer Baughman clal) A football game will be played in this city New year's day between the Medford and local teams. Medford carried away the game by 6 to 2 last year. There will be a game of basket ball between the home and Medford teams at night. POT POURRI Big enough to make a great bit among a lot of hungry cannibals. Jim Flvnn Originally a joke as a fighter. Now all In and unworthy of consideration. Georges Carpentler Good fighter in Europe. From all of which It may be gained that Fltxsinrmons has no hih opinion of tb. present heavyweignis. a . t.... i. ...tn. Til nwnnaner Is to be run from editor-in-chief to the office bov by women ana women omy. iu. driving this suffrage thing too far. The sporting editor is aiso a w union. fr.wii. Tnnnfl When a man has a scoop, emphasis on the "when," til . K. o V. 1 1. In npint It ' Out of chivalry to his women contemporaries. a a Jim Jeffries will soon begin a tour . . . i.i tta oh Vr Jeffries. Mr. oi too vi w. ...... and Mrs. Barney Oldfleld and Mr. and Mrs. Jack ivipper expect, vo ale after th close of the Panama-Pacific Exposition. Each will post $10,000 that this trip shall be a complete girdling of the globe. Some time ago . , i . .1 vinn.Fi ctnrted a tour. but Jim had enough when Paris and Berlin were oone a Exponents of the game of water polo are declared to do iu ii ' water basketball. Jf the swimmers of the country are to b. perpetuated, an other game than water polo will have to be Introduced. Jia ball "had nothing on" water polo for roughness. Some of the heavy hitters Diay have a more useful time In future seasons If the plan of Ban Johnson carries. He i- nn nonslizin? the pitcher i a iif.u11 ' . - who deliberately allow, a batter to walk. vW. secona in muwuw. Is Ban colng to go ...... (ng the fakir and th. honest ptcber? 4 Sapper" O'Neill, another Enslfnh boxer, made his debut In New York recently. His style had cleverness of some of th. English, but lacked tl'.e punch to make the work effective Clever boxing or the style of Welsh and O'Neill is an asset In American rings, only when the boxer has the walloo In addition ie mo jprm, Portland Manager Says Signing of $36,000 Manager Inspires Confi dence in New Organization. Venice Has New Catcher. BY ROSCOE FAWCETT. With a seven months' playing sched ule a. Its germ-proof armament, the Pacific Coast League is the one big baseball circuit which is not worrying over the militancy of the new outlaw Federal League. Walter McCredie. half owner of the Portland Coast champions. Is authority for the statement that the Keds can never hurt the Coast League, owing to the longer season on the west side of the Rockies. Mao spouted this, too, right on the heels of the announcement that Fed eral League agents were attempting to win away Krapp and Higglnbothazn, members of the 1913 Coast League champs. McCredie has been decidedly skeptical over Federal League prospects, but he admits that the Feds pulled a prize move in signing Tinker for the Chicago management. Likewise, he thinks that Tinker showed extreme wisdom in Jumping. Outlaw. Show Backing. "Joe must be around 36 or 87 now, although he gives his age as 34," aald McCredie last night. "He has at best only three or four more years of major ball In hla system, and tSS.000 In the bank for three ..years' service looks pretty fat. "The fact that they have Tinker will serve to Instill confidence In the new league, for It shows they have gome money for working capital." They'll have to grab a dozen Tink ers, however, before the Portland chieftain will become reconciled to the Feds' chances for ultimata success. Mc Credie still nurse, a grouch against outlaws, as a result of the raiding of his first Paclflo Coast champion team tn the Spring of 1907. "I lost Ben Henderson, McHalo and Donahue to the- California outlaws," ruminated McCredie. "and they are all down now. It proved a costly under taking for all concerned. I had a team that would undoubtedly have repeated the 1906 pennant-winning success, put instead. It finished near the bottom." Venice Slga. New Catcber. Venice' has closod th. deal for Catch er Jimmy Stevens, last year of th. Buffalo International League cluD. bo. Hap Hogan's 1914 catching staff Is complete, with Elliott and Stevena as mainstays. Hoian Intends to use Wilholt, the young outfielder who played In th. Cal ifornia State League, as an extra gar dener, Carlisle, Kane and Bayless will be the regulars despite Insistent re- norts early in the Fall tnat uogan con templated a house-cleaning. Hogan Is trying to persuade Del Howard to trad. Cack Henley to Ven ice for young Klepfer, th. New Tork recruit, rfoward refused and his Judg ment Is backed up by his colleague here In- the North, Walter McCredie, of Portland. Wind. Bad for Henley. Bald Mao yesterday: "Howard was wis. In not taking the trade. Henley pitches wonderful ball In Los Angeles, Sacramento and Port land, when h. gets away from those rhillinir breexes that sweep in off the ocean at San Francisco. He would prove a bear eat for Venice and would P. a bigger asset for th. 6e.l. If used in more out of town games." San Francises Is figuring on tne ser vices of Jim Lavender, pitcher, a mem ber of the Chicago Cubs. Lavender was n star two years ago, achieving con siderable notoriety by breaking up Rv.be Marquard's string of 19 consecu tive victories on July S. That was the same day Joe Wood, of oBston, began his run of 16 straights. Earl Moore Is another Cub for whom Del Howard of the Seals Is angling. Ringside Briefs. HH .nln.l ni-ixpfiErht- anuLiicr - . ' : ing in California recently was regis tered at Sacramento. It had 150 names and as 81,000 ar. needed to give it a place on the ballot, there is little chance of a law prohibiting the game unless another petition Is started. A Los Angeles sport writer com m.Tifl Ad Wolgast In claiming the lightweight title n the grounds that Ritchie refuses to battle at 133. Packy McFarland, Jack Britton, Bud Ander son and Willie Ritchie are all fighting above the jirolt. a Granting that Walgast 1 the "title- holder," the "championsnip" oatue win iin.-niilrii. nn New eYar'x day. when Wolgast meets K. O. Brown over the 10-round route. SUFFRAGE SAID DANGEROUS Dr. Bernard Hollander Lectures on "Woman, Love and Vote." TrtMnnw Ti.tt 1 Rnenin.L -Lord A-.W. t.' w - , ' . ' Chnrnwood presided oyer a recent meeting or tne jLinuiciBii.-e.i the Galleries of the Royal Society of British Artists, where Dr. Bernard Hol i , -nfauMant itivp a lecture on ..ii- t ... . f.i iii. Vote." As a result of the training and education given to women in ihcbhi rBa . . i . w.m.n iraa saiz. tne numuer ui ei1 ui"t-" " steadily increasing, and such women, though independent, still felt "the re strictions of their sex. Dissatisfaction had spread among married women, but tho type of woman . ... .. ..ill In thA iwno aes.reu iu raaru p - Kr.aJorlty. The one pursuit, commerce. which naa maae urem i,n,.. ........ She van, was pot followed by women; theugft numberless women had invaded the city: they had gone there as Infer ior clerks, and there was not one wholesale house owned and managed by women. What stamped the suffrage .move ment as peculiar and dangerous to the stability of the state was that it was carried on chiefly by women bache lors and a few disappointed married women, mostly childless, who had no interest in family life. There was nothing to prevent women from form ing an assembly of their own, framing biils for the welfare of their s.x, and getting them taken up by the legisla tive body. The grant ef the franchise would result in the demand that wo men should be represented In Parlia ment, and on this basis, as the women voters weuld outnumber th. men vot ers, one-half of the legislature should in fairness consist of women, and the Cabinet should be half mal. and half female. B6 RECORD OF 1900 IS UNBROKEN Field Goal Feat of Brickley Recalls Robertson's Per formance, at Purdue." 7 OUT-OF 12 TRIES RECORD Difficulties Under Which Football Waa Flayed In Early Days Told by Judge Bemsten, Who Tried Game in Skin-Tight Suit. wv.w tork. no 28. What appears to b. a record field goal kicking feat i v. ...... ...h I. Hi. Xflfll. West after 18 years' omission from gridiron cnronicies. Accorams to mm mnt the five goals kicked by Brlck- 1... rr-mattnrA a n A V n lr or Aa 1 1 An Tlflt CClTL stitute tho best performance since ttooenson, ruraus s .rem ylc-v jvii.nc., set a record for field goals In 1900 which neither Brickley nor any other of the famous kickers has .ever equalled. x . .. .v.. n.......T... T?Mv fnntnfl.ll game of October 27, 1900, Robertson . . i ...i.. Kicked seven goals iron inn nm place kicks, out of 12 attempts. The score of the game was: Purdue 42, Rose Poly 7. llonertson s ieat naa rami forgotten at Purdue until Athletic ti i . n. I. . vini r.AivAd a letter from lke Forest College enclosing an ex cerpt trom a news item in mo oiemur, tho Lake Forest college publication of October 31, 1900. This Item read: "Purdue won a re markable game of football from Rose Poly last Saturday, when Robertson, of Purdue, kicked seven goals from tho field on place kicks. The longest of the seven out of 13 attempts was . i jn.ro. llnA Thin In nn- irum mo i -....... --- dovbteclly a record that will stand for some time. n.1.. n.rll.ttnn tinn htx-n realized, for the record certainly has stood for a long time and probably will stand for a mucu longer periou. itouertsuii wan at nlur-o klrknr the Middle West ever produced, lie was killed in the Purdue railroad wrecK oi uctoDer 31, 1903. " a a m Cornell won permanent possession of the intercollegiate cross-country v. I im.li I- ...n Vi ir nrlnnln. thA in. tercolleglate race at New York City, November aa. rne peculiar lea-um i the win was that Cornell athletic au- . 1 i.i ..... nnf- Q-l-n fO flf thA f !1 (' I WIUMLl-B w i o .' - until several weeks later. Of the 15 cross-country races voroeii iit-a wu 13, but it was not until 1908 that the championship cup was put up ior com petition. a The Blues' Committee of Oxford Uni versity, England, has developed the same aversion to the Olympic games that is evidenced in other quarters of English athletics, as is shown by the following resolution: "The committee of the British Olympio Council, having i .-. .nn.oi in. fion nan that Great Britain may he adequately represented In the Olympic games m -j--, -i- Blues' Committee duly considered that . ttiaip mAetinir and unanir mously agreed to pass the following resolution. mist -umcij -....i-. im proving of Olympic games as now con. ducted, the Blues' Committee recog nises that Great Britain already is i . . -. ,h nivmnfn -rames 1916. bUIUUIIll-U iw v.... . -- ' and therefore hopes that all possible support will bB given to the games of that year, on tne oisim-i uuc. i . i. .Kii.fltinn 1 n herebv im. plied or incurred of their support and Interest In future years an-r j.a.u. Northwestern University possesses ,u othfAtA anaerd In varsity sport competition in the person of Alva Van DyKe, ne ' ) inches In height nd is a candidate tor the basketball team. Placing the ball In the basket should prove an easy teat ior van xjy.e. a a The Washington and Jefferson college weekly Is piqued as a result of the ti.o- ..norniiT accorded the varsity football team this season. The editor fixes the status or in. eleven no lows: "And so we refuse to make any estimate of our own standing. We be. l'eve W. & J. has the greatest team in thA .n.mtrv We believe our team could beat Yale practically and that it should not be ranked below Chicago or anybody else- As lor lnaiviguai eiaro, wa have about 14 that we are very well satisfied with, and the dopesters can in a business home that will give to your business some part of the prestige enjoyed by the building that houses you.- Perhaps you have been uncon sciously suffering by the absorption of a degree of your own prestige by the building you are in. Turn over a new leaf. Choose a business home that will give to you instead of you giving to it. The Northwestern Bank Building Portland's newest and finest skyscraper typifies this idea. It was designed with - the idea of produc ing an office building with every known comfort and convenience possessed by all other office buildings and with many exclusive features besides. First in size, first in importance and first in its conveniences the Northwestern Bank Building is also first in the economy of its rentals, and you who are looking for new quarters cannot over look the overwhelming totality of its advantages. Choose early, while the selection is unlimited. y Leases Now Being Made From January 1, 1914 Northwestern Bank Building GERLINGER-RICHARDS CO., Agents Temporary Office 711-712 Selling Bldg. Marshall 1776 . . . i (him 4nst as they taie mem ur a.c v -- - - . choose, without ruffling our dispositions half as much as do tne tnougnts "i approaching exams." The difficulties under which football was played in the early days of the sport is well illustrated by a story told by Judge Remster at the recent banquet to the Purdue eleven. In telling of the outfitting of the first- Old Gold and Black team he said: "We had no store in -fayette that carried football t-gs, no w. got a little German tailoi ' to measure all the boys and make suits lor them. He made th. uniforms out or bedticking, without padding, and sk n tight. When we appeared on the Held to play Butler they protested, because they said we had greased that bedtick Ing in the hope they would be unable to hold us when they tackled. That was not true and after tc minutes' parley, lug, th. protest was disallowed. The annual meeting of the National Collegiate Athletic Association to be held in New York tomorrow will be de voted to the discussion of college ath letics from different viewpoints. Dr. Endicott Peabody, of Groton School, will speak on "American and English Ideals of Sport"; Dr. Nay smith will take baseball as his subject; Dr. Ehler, of the University of Wisconsin, will speak -on college track athletics, and Dr. E. H. Nlchol, of Harvard, and Dr. Young, of Cornell, will discuss "Bummer Base ball." ip. nnfi,..eit. nf Montana is con sidering a plan to hold a dual boxing and wrestling meet with Montana State College next spring. -v.i. lA.Aa in thA number of players selected by Walter Camp for his AU Amerlcan football teams during the past 24 years. During that period Yale has placed 79. Harvard 68, Princeton 49, Pennsylvania S4, West Point 6, Michi gan 6, Chicag'o 5, Dartmouth S, Carlisle 4, Brown 4, Cornell 8, Columbia 3 An napolis 2, Minnesota t and Amherst, Pennsylvania otate, uyracuso aw consin, I each. Furraers Elevator Operating:." Gir;isri.SEE. Idaho. Dec. 28. (Special.) The local Farmers' Union started its Comfort and Good Cheer Await You Always at The Hofbrau-Quelle At the new Hofbrau-Quelle more than at any other place perhaps will one always find a merry throng gathered. Especially so is it apparent this week. Manager Klein seems to have recently struck an ar tesian well of good cheer. Drop in any time during the day or evening and you'll find it on tap. The Cabaret this week is making a big hit. And Janiski's Imperial German Orchestra is always popular. Next Sunday will be a good time to take advantage o'f the Hofbrau-Quelle 's big Special Sunday Table d'Hote Dinner, 5:30 to 8:00 ONE PQM.AI. Reservations Now Being Made for New Year's Eve Entrance on Alder Are You O Savin The New Clear Havana VALUE OP EACH Bl.mauer-Fraak Drag Co, n.nr aUviinr hAra vesterdav and ele vated grain into the different large bins. The elevator worked satisfac torily and all the farmers who were present wero much pleased. Electricity supplies power for running tb. .levator. DUMA CONFLICT LOOMS Octobi'lsts Tass Resolutions- of Hos tile Character. ST. PETERSBURG. Dee. 85 (Spe- ciaL) There is a marked revival of interest in home politics in Russia owing to the growing feeling, which was noticeable last session and is now still more visible, that the fourth Duma will end by coming' into direct conflict with the government. The conference of the Center Party, styled Octobrist, because it bases Itself on the Imperial Constitutional Manifesto of October 80, 1905, has just passed a series of reso lutions of a' definitely hostile charac-; ter, criticising the Council of tha Em pire as obstructive to legislation, de manding Inviolability of the person, and freedom of conscience, speech, meeting, and association, th. abolition of government by exceptional laws, and the guaranteed freedom of par liamentary elections. The party has declared that tho policy of the government Is In entire opposition to the spirit of the imperial manifesto, and as it lacks faitb in the government's desire to carry out the monarch's will, and observes tho ap pearance. In the country of angry mur muring) and discontent fed by revolu tionary organizations, it has pledged Itself to use every parliamentary method to fight the government. The significance of this announce ment will be understood when it is , realized that the declared policy of the Octobrists has hitherto been to en deavor to obtain reform by working in friendly co-operation with the govern ment M, Guchkoff, who Is the party leader, although no longer a deputy, delivered a strong attack on the gov ernment. It is, however, questioned whether the Octobrists are sufficient ly united In their new policy and suf ficiently strog to carry on the war they have declared on tne government ITS. ymr and on Sixth Street g Bands? BAND. Vs GENTS Distributor., Furflpdt