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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1912)
rr'T7 iroRXnv; OKEGONIAX. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1912. IS O'Keefe Outpointed in Ten Round Bout at New York. Prompt Delivery in Three to Five Days Every Garment Made in My Own Shops KILBANE UPON AGGRESSIVE PORTLAND'S LEADING TAILOR. SIXTH STREET, CORNER OF STARK Although Opponent Draws First Blood, He Lead in Fighting From Start to Finish of the Engagement. KL BARE WINNEH f - : Mm NEW YORK, Sept. 19. Johnny Kil- bane, of Cleveland, champion leather weight pugilist, outpointed Eddie O'Keefe, of Philadelphia, In their ten round bout at Madison Square Garden tonight. Kllbana weighed In at 125 pounds; O'Keefe at 121 ii. In the opening round O'Keefe, with a left Jab, started Kilbane's mouth bleeding, but Kllbane was nearly al ways on the aggressive, landing left jabs to the face and left and right hooks to the head, and occasionally sending in a right half-uppercut to the body. At long range be was always better than the Phlladelphian. O'Keefe got to Kilbane's body sev eral times and reached the face with his left, but Kilbane's clever blocking saved him from many lefts to the face. AVOLGAST READY FOR FIGHTS Little Champion Willing to Defend His Title Thanksgiving Day. LOS ANGELES. Cal.. Sept. 19. Ad Woigast, champion lightweight, is will ing to meet anyone In his division on Thanksgiving day. according to a mes sage Manager McCarey, of the Vernon Club, received from Tom Jones, Wol gast's manager, today. Jones said he would prefer holding the match In Los Angeles. McCarey at once started to find an opponent for the champion. Mandot, Ritchie and Rivers are mentioned, but McCarey made no formal announcement- It was understood that of the three fighters mentioned. Rivers was most favored. AUTOS PUT TRACK IX SHAPE Milwaukee Car Owners Driver Over Race Course and Dry It Up. MILWAUKEE, Wis., Sept. 19. Com munity co-operation won over adverse weather conditions at the Wauwatosa race course today and put an appar ently hopeless roadway into fit condi tion for running tomorrow's prelimi naries in the Vanderbllt cup automobile race programme. W. R. New of the Milwaukee Auto mobile Dealers' Association proposed that every person in town who owned a machine drive around the eigbt-mlto course. By 1 o'clock there were JOO cars speeding around and around the course. By 3 o'clock this number had increased to BOO. Before sunset a third of Mil waukee's several thousand automobiles were entered in the drying up marathon. A Tremendous Purchase of Woolens Enables Me to Begin This Morning An Astonishing 10-Day s' Sale of Suits or Measure;25! Choose From Nearly 2000 .Beau tiful New Fall and Winter Patterns of $40, $37.50, $35, $32.50 & $30 Fabrics DIRIGIBLE GOES OVER SEAS Zeppelin Hansa Travels From Ham burg to Copenhagen. HAMBURG. Sept. 19. The Zeppelin dirigible balloon Hansa made an over sea voyage to Denmark and Sweden today, visiting the Danish capital and Malmo, a Swedish naval port. The voyage occupied 12 hours, which in cluded a landing- at Copenhagen for luncheon. The fastest train between Hamburg and Copenhagen runs the distance in nine hours. German military experts point out that the air voyage was far more dif ficult than a flight from Cologne to London, Willamette Football Schedule Out. WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY, Salem. Or.. Sept. 19. (Special.) The Willam ette University football schedule will be as follows: Alumni game will open the season: Willamette vs. University of Oregon, at Eugene, October 12; Wil lamette vs. Chemawa Indians, at Sa lem. October 19; Willamette vs. Whit worth College, at Salem, November 21; Willamette vs. Vancouver Soldiers, at Salem. November 5; Willamette vs. University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, November IS; Willamette vs. Univer sity of Montana, Salem, Thanksgiving day.1 Games will be arranged with Pa cific University at Mount Angel Col lege, but the dates are not set. For the first time in years Willamette will not meet the 'Oregon Agricultural Col lege. This Is due to the attitude of Dolan, of the "Aggies." who refuses to consider a game with Willamette. It Is believed here that this is due to the near defeat that Dolan's team re ceived by the Methodists last year. Amateur Athletics. The Oregon Soccer Football Associa tion will be re-organised at a meeting to be announced shortly. All teams wishing to become members of the association should communicate at once with J. A. Addleman. 66 Sixth street. ' The second season of the Archer & Wiggins Football League will have its schedule made up and other matters arranged at a meeting at the store of the same name. Saturday night at 8 o'clock. There are spaces In the sched ule for two more teams and any teams wishing to join the organisation In an endeavor to land the handsome trophy should send their managers to the meeting Saturday night. The Timms-Cress baseball team will play Estacada at Estacada Sunday, for the second time this season. The Port landers met them in the first game played .by the Tlmms-Cress team in 1911. The painters took that game. Baseball Injuries Fatal. CLARKSTON. Wash, Sept. 19. Er nest Raaberg Is dead at his home here following injuries received last Sun day In a ball game at Lewiston. Idaho. Raaberg in sliding to a base collided with another player. One of his legs was broken and he suffered an injury to his spine which resulted in a blood clot at the bam of the brain. Swimming Record Is Broken. GLASGOW. Sept. 19. J. G. Hatfield, the English swimmer, who was one of the competitors in the last Olympic games, broke the world's swimming record tonight at 1000 yards. He cov ered the distance In 13 minutes 19 1-5 seconds. The previous record of 13 minutes 20 3-5 seconds was made by C. M. Daniels in 190T at New York. Chemawa to Have Eleven. CHEMAWA. Or.. Sept. 19. (Special.) Erom the present indications the Chemawa Indians will have a fast foot ball team this season. Edwin A. Smith, formerly a player on the famous Car lisle Indian team, will coach the team. Overcoats to No tailor on the Pacific Coast, so I am con stantly being told, buys their woolens in such tremendous quantities, direct from the mill! ness. The phenomenal announcement which you're reading now could never have been printed had I not made a huge purchase of woolens for cash; and in doing so secured a price-concession which enables this remarkable 10 days' Tailoring Sale Tight at the opening of the Fall .Season. In this enormous lot of Woolens is every handsome new fabric and coloring of the season! Nearly 2000 distinct patterns in fine Scotch Tweeds, new English Wide - Wales, long-hair Cheviots, Bannockburns, Homespuns, Silk Worsteds, Basket Weaves and Silk Mixtures. . n.ii 1.-1. '. ,,.1, v, TJM.Inn TTo-trovin Wmnc -raisin nrnwns. rfirldlsTl OT1P.S. DUT- .L ell let IIS lllUli are Ciuuaivc vv Lit ixlc ui j. m uonu. jLa.va.uci, uiunuu, , .7 a pies, fancy blues dozens of new shades of gray. Smart pin stripes, silk-woven stripes, homespuns, chalklines; overplaids, mottled colorings, etc. Think of it!-I also include high-grade 20-ounce West-of-England Blue Serges famous the world over. - Also staple black goods in smooth or rough finish, which most tailors put into their $o0 and $60 suits. n a -marta rrk -rrnnT fnpnsnT'A in Ttiv own tnoroiifrhlv-orsranized shoes, risrht here on the premises, by skilled journeymen tailors. Behind every garment stands my reputation tor fair dealing and satisfaction. ' ' - v 1 What man will wear ready-made Clothes this Fall, when he can have a made-to-measure Suit or Over coat, of the most beautiful fabrics produced by foreign and domestic inills, for $25? A Suit or Overcoat which is individually built for you a "custom-made" appearance at a "ready-made price. No rep utable tailor to my knowledge ever made a more phenomenal, bona fide offer in Portland so early m the season. The sale is positively for 10 days only, beginning at 8. o'clock ttas morning and ending Tuesday 1 "- 1 "' 1 ' " i.s.i i i i -n.i ; ; 1 made' to your measure in either Suit or Overcoat for 10 days only, $25. Ray Barkhurst, Sixth St. at Stark Among the old material are Powers. Edenshaw, Downie, Davis, Charles Scott, Sortor. Griffin, Walker, Cle ments and Douglas. Kelly and Edder are new members. Maxmever's Team to Play Albany. ALBANY. Or- Sept. 19. (Special.) Maxmeyer's Stars, of Portland, who were recently defeated by me Aioany in a ViArH-fmlirht same In this city, will play the Albany team again here next aunoay. Pitched Ball Kills Ballplayer. T ... Cant 10 HflfTT Kerf. unicix, , w " , . - - - - - a player on the Greenfield team," died today as the result ot being mi in me head by a swirtiy pucneq mm. Sporting Sparks -v, .. n i .jun. hni Addressed let ters to 300 editors in the South asking them to bar Jack Johnson's name from the newspapers. He asserts that in marrying the white woman who killed herself, the negro affronted every white woman and "defeated the purpose of the Caucasian race." He asks that no publicity be given the movement be cause publicity would defeat it. turned to school at Washington Univer sity. Fred Sparger, who was chosen to lead the football team, is in the concrete business with his father; Ira Courtney, captain-elect of the track team. Is in the law office of his orotner in San Francisco; Karl Staata, leader of the basketball team, will enter Mich igan, and Jack Johnson, star twirler on the ball team. Is doing steel con struction work in Utah. Hltrcinbotham's josh on Happy Hogan recently, when he caused the Vernon boss to tag up to Sacramento from San Francisco with President Baum to pro test against his trade to Los Angeles, recalls a Joke Hogan's friends played on him uo here the week previous. Larry Moselle, an Eastern baseball man sojourning In the city, rang Hogan up at the Multnomah Hotel one afternoon. informed him It was Dr. speaking. and that Roy Brashear. a ball player. was In the City Hospital with a broken leg. Hogan hastened to the mecca of the maimed only to discover that he had been victimized. m m m Irvina- Hlgglnbothara, Beaver twirler. says Outfielder Patterson, of the Oaks, will have to remedy one batting weak ness if he hopes to stick with the St. Louis Americans next year. Hlggln bothara explains that the drafted .300 batter cannot hit a curve on the out side of the plate, and that as soon as the big leaguers get wise to him they will have him on the hip. Welcome home, Lena! That's what the Chicago fans will be warbling next Spring, for -Russell Blackburn, ex-Chl- cago American shortstop, has been drafted from Milwaukee by the Chi cago Cubs. Blackburn was shunted to Milwaukee only a few weeks ago, going with Catcher Block in exchange for Catcher Schalk. Buck Weaver got his Job this year with the Sox. Chance will groom Blackburn to succeed Tin ker when the ex-Portlander gets old and feeble. Charles Babb, boss of the Reading Tri-State League team, is visiting rela tives in Portland. Babb will remain two or three weeks. CANDIDATESTO GIVE TALKS Plana for Democratic Campaign, to Open October I, Considered. Most of the candidates on the Demo cratic state and county tickets will be given an opportunity, with a 10-mlnute limit, before the Jackson Club at its meeting in the Medical Building at 8 o'clock tonight, to present the reasons why they should be elected. Among those who will speak are J. B. Ryan, R. W. Montague, Frank Schlegel, J. Woods Smith, A. F. Flegel, A. H. Nich ols, Dr. John Welch, W. .L. Page, Rob ert Upton, Ernst Kroner. John Cronin, Oglesby Young and E. Versteeg. Democrats are completing plans for their Joint state and county campaign, which will be opened in Multnomah PIANOS AND PLAYERS Your choice of 12 differ ent makes of the world's best PIANOS and "PLAYER PIANOS in a variety of styles , and woods. Lowest possible prices. Easy terms of payment. SOULE BROS. 388 Morrison Street Opp. Olds, Wortman & King County October 1 and continue until election day with meetings every night. Chairman Haney. of the state commit tee, said yesterday that, the selection of speakers who would be sent to- Ore gon by the National committee had not been decided finally. It is reasonably certain that Representative Henry, of Texas, and Senator-elect James, of Kentucky, will be assigned- to this state. It is also possible that Governor Marshall, the party's Vice-Presidential nominee, may make a western tour which will include Oregon. But - the dates for none of the speakers have been announced. In their state campaign, the Demo crats will have the assistance of the following speakers: Senator Chamber lain, ex-Senator Gearin, C. E. S. Wood. John H. Stevenson, C. C. McCulloch, of Baker, and Walter M. Pierce, of Union. RAZOR SCRATCH IS FATAL Blood Poison From Cut on Thumb .Kills ex-Portland Boy. LEBANON, Or., Sept. 19. (Special.) Blood poison resulting from a slight razor cut on the thumb yesterday caused the death 'of Roy B. Wiley, age 24, a young business man of this place. The fatal accident occurred about a week ago when Mr. Wiley was shav ing. As the cut was apparently insig nificant, being hardly through the Colonist Fares to the - PACIFIC NORTHWEST Via C. & N. W. or C. M. & St. P.,-Union Pacific, O. S. L. and SALE DATES, SEPT. 25 TO OCT. 10 FROM CITIES IN THE EAST TICKETS FURNISHED to friends or relatives back East upon deposit of only the price of ticket at this end. No Charge For Telegram For further particulars apply to City Ticket Office, Third and Washington Sts. Phone Marshall 4500 skin, little attention was given It. Two days later the thumb began to swell and a physician pronounced it a rabid case of blood poison. The effect soon spread throughout the- body. Mr. Wiley had lived in Lebanon for a number of years, except for about three years, when he was in Portland In the employ of the Laue-Davis Drug Company. For the last three years he had been proprietor of a drug store In Lebanon. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Wiley. He leaves a-young widow, to whom he was married a year ago. FREE LECTURE TONIGHT. Walter Gifford Smith on "The Hawaiian Wonderland" at Taylor street M. E. Church, 8 o'clock. , Announcement! NEW DEPARTMENT JAb WE HAVE ADDED BOYS' GIRLS' and CHILDREN'S SCHOOL SHOES to our large line of Men's and Women's Shoes Men's $2-50 Shoes ' QaA Women's $ Shoes Boys', Girls' and Children's Shoes at Proportion ately Low Prices P in fn Lw-t f mra 'MUU r 7 u 1 1 5 fVri lEEL . 244 WASHINGTON STREET BETWEEN SECOND AND THIRD