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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1920)
THE MORNIXG OEEOOXUX, TUESDAT, OCTOBER 19, 1920 15 4 :& & millfei&ywggw a y rfvIO IbtBr fiAAm& m.J1 Cigarette tfs S ftwWWf AW itff?i some. fefe1 ' ifa Chotat American and In, PWpPI VWL fllife Ported tobaccos were blended fer ' bynewmeAodthatbring ff" IMSrfM- - lilM ri Plltl$l ' AJ'SW to make an easier-drawing, pNs7J MW. Mil' P? MS iPft (VK -burning cigarette. iifefKsJ!r ...,,,i,,,,,:c3s?Ss3M4i- ij i rj ili Mil iiwWpii '""i1 i W 1 i''j I1 1 1 ROUGH RACE IS PROSPECT BAXKS SKIPPERS PROMISE XO 1'IXK TEA KTE.M. to CIoQChestcr KlBhcrmen Ready Meet Xora Seotians in Real Ocean Test. GLOUCESTER. Mass.. Oct. 18. "Give us good sea weather and we'll make the international cup -races look a pink tea," said the Gloucester fish ermen when they came in from the banks late today to prepart' a wel come for the Nova Scotia fishermen due here tomorrow to complete ar rangements for the race between the American schooner Esperanto and the Canadian ehallenser Delawanna. An announcement tonight commis sioned Captain Martin Welsh, captain and part owner or the auxiliary echooner Thelma, as skipper of the Esperanto. Four captains were named &s members of her crew of 25. At the conierence tomorrow the lo cal fishermen xpect to ask the Cana dian challengers for a series of three races. Dimensions of the contesting schoon ers were made public tonight as fol lows: Net tonnasre, Esperanto. 91.33; lensrth. 107 feet 4 inches: breadth. 2& feet 4 inches: depth. 11 feet 4 Inches. Net tonnage. Delawanna, 95; length. 106 'eet 8 inches; breadth, 26 feet 3 inches; depth, 10 feet, 4 inches. WHITMAN READY FOR IDAHO walla football Eleven to Play Xext Saturday. WHITMAN COLLRGE. Walla Walla. Wash., Oct. IS. (Special.) With the college of Idaho furnishing the op position, tne Whitman football team plays its second football conteet at Caldwell Saturday. In preparation for the game Coach Nig" Borleske has been putting the men through strenuous paces during the past week following the Washington contest. .and the men are commencing to show 1 improvement. Whitman will be handicapped by the loss of Bonecrusher" Comrada, tackle, and Beck, end, both of whom will probably not be In the lineup Saturday. Comrada, who etarred in the Whitman - Washington contest. Buffered a fractured left arm, which is still in a cast, and also a badly injured right hand. Beck failed to return to Whitman, and the loss of his weight on the line will be felt. In playing the College of Idaho, Whitman meets a squad which for three years has not lost a game, and a close and fiercely contested battle is anticipated. Anson Cornell, former University of Oregon quarter and all northwest quarter in 1912, is coach of the Idaho team. Saturday's game will mark the first time that these two institutions have met on the gridiron. JURY WANTS GAMBLER P-REY against major league players, how ever, on the strength of evidence al ready received, Replogle said, but the Jury plans to delve tomorrow almost exclusively into the ramifications of an alleged gambling ring which sought control of the annual cham pionship series. The committee drafted several plans for reorganization, but came to no agreement. CIBCUU IN FINAL WEEK IDEAL WEATHER GREETS BANG TAILS IX GEORGIA. TED THYE BEATS JEPSOX Fall From Ring Mars Wrestling y Bout at Ileppner. HEPP.N'ER, Or., Oct. 18. (Special.) Before a crowded house Saturday night Ted Thye, middleweight wres tling champion and wrestling in structor at Multnomah club, Portland, maintained his supremacy in a vic tory over Ens Jepson, champion mid dleweight of Canada, in two straight falls lastins 32 and 15 minutes, re spectively. An accident in the first round gave Jopson an ugly fall. A rope gave way and precipitated him onto the cement' floor several feet below. There is considerable tallt among lo cal fans of a match here between Jepson and a Hindu wrestler from Portland on an early date. Leonard Outpoints Tillman. AKROX, O., Oct. 18. Benny Leon ard, lightweight champion, outpointed Johnny Tillman, St. Paul welter weight, in a 10-round bout tonight. Four Events on Card Are Hotly Contested "With Fast Time Registered In Each. ATLANTA, Ga, Oct. 18. The open ing today of the final week of the Grand Circuit racing under ideal weather conditions ana with the track in fairly good condition brought out four hotly contested events, three pacing and one trotting. John Henry, bay gelding and a con sistent winner this season, the prop erty of Thomas W. Murphy, took the 2:05 pace, winning the first and third heats, his best time being 2:024. The 2:12 pace went to Captain Mack, a brown horse, in straight heats of 2:05 "4, while the 2:20 class-pacing was won by Nellie S., a bay mare, owned by C. G. English of Rome, Ga., and piloted by George Stiles. Best time, 2:106. In the trotting event, open to the 2:09 class, E. Colorado, bay horse, owned by the Cox stable and driven by Cox, won by taking the first and third heats. Best time, 2:10. among themselves and independent of other major league clubs. JOHNSON' OUSTING OPPOSED Five American. League Clubs Said to Favor Reorganizatoin. WASHINGTON. Oct. 18. Clark Grif fith, president-manager of the Wash ington Americans, declared tonight that the five American league clubs n-ot represented at today's meeting in Chicago were not opposed to a re organization of baseball. "We want a complete house-cleaning," Griffith said when informed of the action taken at Chicago, "but w think it wxuld be best to wait until the Chicago grand jury completes its investigation of alleged crookedness. We don't think it advisable to start a reorganization until all the evidence is in." Griffith asserted that today's Chi cago conference was a "political af fair." The three clubs participating. he added, are seeking to oust Ban Johnson as head of the American league. Formation of a 12-club league to replace the two major leagues, in GriJ.fith'3 opinion, would be impracticable. Ml CHARGE PROMISED REDRESS FOR MARYS YILLE AT TACK TO BE ASKED. 11.5115 mills, a reduction of 6 mills from last year. Kelso's levy is 15 mills for current expenses, .86 mill for warrant indebtedness payment and .86 mill for the city library. The school district levy is but 12 mills, which incl&des a big sum for warrant and bond redemption. Chicago Probe Today Will Try and Find Series "Fixers." CHICAGO, Oct. 18. The Cook county grand jury investigating the baseball candal does not expect further testi mony implicating major league play ers in gambling and game 'throwing. but will devote its future sessions to securing evidence against the men who are alleged to have "fixed" the 1918 world's series by bribing Chicago American league players to lose games to the Cincinnati National league team, according to a statement to night by Hartley Replogle, prosecutor in charge of the inquiry. Further indictments might be voted STATE OFFICIAL IS SUED Accountants Seek to Examine Records of Commissioner. BOISE. Idaho. Oct. 18. (Special.) W. J. Hall, commissioner of public works of the state of Idaho, was made defendant in a mandamus action filed in district court this afternoon for the purpose of compelling him to open the books of his department tor public Inspection. The suit was filed before Judge C. P. McCarthy of the 3d judicial district and requests that the defendant be at once called into court to show cause why a writ of mandate should not be issued com manding him to permit the petitioners and their assistants to fully examine the public record books and accounts of his department. The plaintiffs In the case are Charles K. Folsum and Henry Schild- hauser, accountants, who desired to make a complete audit of the books of the department of public works. The complaint sets out that the petitioners at proper office hours on October 7, 8, 11 and 16 requested the defendant to allow them to examine the public records, but that on each occasion they were refused. STANF1ELP IS CONFIDENT Big Harding-Coolidgo Majority in Oregon Predicted. EOSEBURO, Or.. Oct 18. (Special.) Robert N. Stanfield. republican can didate for United States senator, ar rived in Roseburg this afternoon to remain until tomorrow. He is re turning from a tour of the southern part of the state in the interest of hit candidacy, having just visited Jack son and Josephine counties. "After visiting these counties and others." !r, Stanfield said. "I am more convinced than ever that this is going to be a straight republican year in Oregon. I believe that Harding and Coolidge will have a majority of 50,000 to 80.000 votes in Oregon and I am confident that the full repub lican etate ticket will be elected. , HEROIC BALL MOVE MADE (Continued From First Page. fixed at not less than $25,000 a year and he shall be required to devote his entire time to the affairs of the board and that the other members of the board of control shall be paid not less than $10,000 a year, but they shall only be required to devote such time to the affairs of the board as shall be necessary. (e) That said board of control when selected, shall have all the pow ers of the present national commis sion and such further powers as may be thought needful and appropriate by the drafting committee hereinafter provided for. (f) Said agreement shall be in force for 25 years and contain ap propriate provisions for its amend menu - Kew Agreement v Come. S. A drafting committee shall be appointed at the meeting November 8 to meet with a committee to be se lected by the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, the duty of which joint committee shall be forthwith to prepare and submit to all professional baseball clubs for sig nature the new national agreement hereby provided for. 4. All clubs of the National league, the American, league and of the National association are invited to join the new agreement- It is not the purpose of the proposed or ganization to exclude any profession al baseball club, but it is the purpose of the undersigned so to reorganize the national game, that the public whoso entrance fees provide the means for the maintenance of pro fessional baseball, shall have every assurance that the game is conducted in a proper manner. The undersigned are convinced that the present or ganization has utterly failed of its purpose and that some new organic provisions must be adopted for the maintenance of the game. 5. The undersigned clubs . have entered into an agreement that in the event the proposed organisation as provided In the resolutions, be not accomplished by tae acceptance of the proposed plan by November 1, 192 by other clubs of the American league, the undersigned shall carry out the purposes set forth in these resolutions COYLE CHANGES HIS P.QLE WASHINGTON DEFEAT CAUSES STAR TO RUSH AID. Football Supplants Politics in Mind of Candidate Who Heeds Dis tress Call of Varsity. SPOKANE. Oct. 18. "Wee" Coyle, football star, gained the ascendency today oyer William J. Coyle, candi late for lieutenant governor on the republican ticket. Following the de feat of the University of Washington, Saturday at the hands of Montana, Coyle headed an appeal today from Coach Allison at Seattle and aban doned his campaign plans for this week to hurry back to assist in shap ing the Washington team for its game with Oregon Agricultural col lege next Saturday. Coyle, several years ago a star on the Washington team, -was arranging today for a speaker to fill bis en gagements for the remainder of this week in eastern Washington, and planned to leave for Seattle imme diately, after his meeting tonight' at Newport. Approval for the arrangement was obtained from State Chairman Charles Hebbard. it was announced. Harry 'Wood, Timber Worker Or ganizer, Declares Marshall Was Leader in Assanlt. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., Oct. IS. (Special.) A telegram received today at central labor headquarters from Harry Wood, vice-president and or ganized of the international timber workers' union, stated that Wood had reached San Francisco and would lay his complaint of alleged maltreatment at the hands of a Susanville, Cal., mob Monday night. October 11, before both state and federal authorities and press his demands for redress. Wood declared that he was seized by & mob of 20 or 30 me, blind folded and taken some distance from town, where he was turned loose and ordered to "beat it," with the threat that he would be hanged if be returned. E. A. Massey, city marshal of Susanville. has made a statement that Wood was taken from him by a crowd who struck the marshal, over the head - and felled him. He said that when he recovered, the mob lead ers told him to go home and Wood had disappeared. In statements made here prior to his departure for San Francisco. Wood declared that through the meshes In the sack used- as blind he recognized the marshall as the leader of the mob. James H. Doyle, organizer of the California federation of labor, is con ducting an investigation in Susan ville. The affair has deeply stirred labor men in southern Oregon and northern California. Local timber workers are planning a big protest meeting for next Monday night. Kelso Levy 53.74 Mills." KELSO. Wash , Oct. 18. (Special.) The 1920 tax levy for Kelso will be 53.74 mills, compared with 77 mills last year. The state levy is 13.6SS5 mills, that or Cowlitz county is Supreme Court to Rest. . WASHINGTON, Oct, 18. The su preme court will recess from October 25 to November 8, it was announced today. TUS HART CIGAR CO, S05-S07 P13JB ST. Nash Sedan for Sale New est model 7-passenger Nash Sedan, guaranteed in first class condition; driven less than 5000 miles, fully equipped, front and rear hamper, best spotlight, large glass reflector, rubber running board mats, extra tire; all tires in first class condition. Apply to MEIER & FRANK'S Garage, 2d and Jefferson. A Dtxierent Kiada mt LIUJn 4 DUfwst Prices - EAST 494 TRIBUTE PAID PILGRIMS British Mission Stands at Plymouth Rock as Honor. PLYMOUTH, ' Mass.. Oct. IS. A British mission stood at Plymouth Rock today to honor the memory of the Pilgrim fathers. The mission, headed by Lord Ratb creedan, came in connection with the tercentenary of the Pilgrims' landing. HEPPNER WOMEN JOLTED Faucets Go on Rampage When New Water Supply Comes. HEPPNER. Or, Oct. 18. (Special.) Heppner's new 8100,000 gravity water system is completed and pure mountain water was turned into the city mains for the first time yester day. Housewives, accustomed to low pressure service, were amazed while preparing the Sunday dinner when they discovered that the water faucets had gone on a rampage and kitchen utensils were sent clattering in sinks. The new gravity supply Is brought to the city from the headwaters of Willow creek through a concrete and redwood pipe line 15 miles long. The city has long suffered "from water shortage during the late summer months and it is believed that the new system will solve the water problem for a long while to come. 1 Stetson Style Stetson Stality Stetson Motley's Worth TLc same today as tor 55 years assured by the 'Stetson Quality Mark in Every Hat John B. Stetson Company PUUdelphis Your final test of a hat is that it shall look well on you. An in tensely personal and individual matter, indeed! IN this city and its environs, you can drop on any one of ten, twenty, perhaps fifty Stetson hatters. Out of the range of hats shown by any one of these men, you can pick the one hat that might have been made to your personal order. Derby, Soft Hat, Velour blocks to suit every type of face and physique. All the colorings that are good this season. Every variation and nicety of finish approved by the welldressed man. A-welcome service, indeed, for the man who is really critical about the way his hat looks. nn c a N