THE MORNING OREGONIAX, MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1915. UPSETS . MANY IN FOOTBALL RESULTS OREGON AGGIE COACH AND TWO OF HIS STARS WHO LEFT FOR MICHIGAN LAST. NIGHT. OREGON AGGIES OFF 1 FOR GAME 111 EAST lO 3: I! ii Northwest Games Are Accord ing to Form, but East Is Full of Surprises. jj BERKELEY APPEARS WEAK i .Michigan Aggies, by Victory Over 1'ost'B Team, Likely to Swamp Oregon Aggies; Dobie Seems to Have Another Easy Game. BY ROSCOE FAWCETT. ' Northwestern football ran somewhat true to the form charts Saturday Washington 21, Gongaza 7 and Oregon 21, Whitman 0 but elsewhere there were enough surprises on tap to load a Christman fir. Look'em over: California 10. Southern California 28. Cornell 10, Harvard 0. Yale 7. Washington and Jefferson 16. Michigan 0, Michigan Aggies 24. Nebraska 20, Notre Dame 19. Pittsburg's 14-7 win over Pennsyl vania also was noteworthy, although Warner's victory hardly butts into the arena as a curiosity. Pittsburg beat the Navy 49-7 the week previous and that was rather a forecast of what the Pitts had up their sleeves. The two prime upsets of the week, from a local viewpoint, were the rout of the California boys by University of Southern California, and the terrible trouncing Michigan suffered at the hands of the Michigan Aggies, whom they defeated last year 3-0. There was considerable speculation 'over this game hereabouts, because the Oregon Aggies left last evening for East Lansing to rub shoulder pads with this samd - man-eating squad that stepped all over "Hurry Up" Yost. Corvallla Faces Trimming;. One thing is very evident, viewing the coming fray from this distance, and that is that the Corvallis boys are due for a trimming and a bad one. It may not exceed the 29-0 lacing ad ministered by Washington State a week ago everybody hopes not but every element of psychology and physiology will be against Or. Stewart and his proteges strange field, crowd, weight and condition. And now we turn to the California slaughter. Southern California 28, Cali fornia 10. Whew! To a Berkeleyite this score will sound about as funny as a cry for help, but to Gil Dobie well, the Washington coach ought to be able to extract a globule 'of mirth out of that score. The Oregon 1rgies defeated Southern California someNing like 3S-6 last Fall I in the historic Belgian benefit game at Tacoma. Southern California no stronger this season, 'tis said trims California 28-10, and Washington is to tackle California on November 6 at ' Berkeley for the "Pacific Coast cham pionship." As the season progresses the fact ; Impresses itself more and more upon you that Gilmour Dobie is a sly fox : when it comes to arranging "difficult" ' schedules for himself. If the pugna ; clous patriarch of the Sound country doesn't go through another unbeaten season it will be no fault of his, and who can blame him? Dobie Has Easy Time Ahead. Washington's schedule calls for frames with Gonzaga College of Spo kane, Whitman College, two with Cali fornia and a Thanksgiving game with Colorado. Already the purple and gold has beat en little Gonzaga, 21-7: Oregon and the Oregon Aggies have eliminated Whit man by scores of 21-0 and 34-7; Col orado has already been scalloped and trapped. 28-6 by the Colorado Aggies a fortnight ago and 44-0 Saturday by Colorado College, and the University of Southern California completed the butchery by rolling the Berkeley var sity around in California loam. 28-10. And, mind you. Washington side stepped Oregon, the Oregon Aggies and "Washington State last Winter so as to move out into faster company. Such company is about as fast as Rube Maxmeyer on stilts or as Harry Meek doing 100 yards in a straight Jacket. Washington should have little difficulty in defeating California any where from 20-0 to 60-0. and, if the Dobteites do not lambast Colorado 40-0 we will pan another "surprise" anthem. Washington has Initiated a new cus . torn. Scores of the football games are tolled off on the expensive chimes re cently installed on the campus. From an economical viewpoint we' humbly suggest that they hire a trip-hammer. 3t will do the work much more ef Sf icaciously. we wot. What wot you? Oregon on Even Keel. Oregon's 21-0 defeat of Whitman col lege shows that Bezdek's team is back on an even keel and were Oregon to cross with Washington State again we are of the opinion that the battle would be mighty close. Bez figures that the ecore should have been about 14-10 anyway. One of the Washington State touchdowns was simply handed over all done up in lace curtains and baby ribbons. Bezdek sent little Anson Cor nell into the game about the third or xourth quarter, and Captain Anson tried to pull an unexpected coup on his op ponents. He and Johnny Beckett made tip a freak forward pass play on the tpir of the moment and it worked fine for the other fellows. Zimmerman or some Stater intercepted it and ran about 70 yards for a touchdown. Naturally it made the coach look bad - Tor there was no safety on the play, hence this little explanation. Oregon has only Willamette to meet r netween now and November 20, when the state championship classic with the Aggies will be played at Kugene. The Oregon. Aggies, on the other hand, will meet the Michigan Aggies next Satur . day and Idaho on November 6 at Cor -vallis. This will give both teams a . fortnight's rest before their most im -V portant game of the Fall. In 1913 these '. two played a 10-10 tie and last year It finished a 3-3 standoff so the 1915 clash is cloaked with more than or dinary interest. Judging from the scores thus far, they are again closely matched. Wash ington State walloped Oregon 28-3 and the Aggies 29-0, and Oregon defeated "Whitman 21-0 and the Aggies trimmed the Missionaries 34-7. The bug who can find any considerable edge in this doping could find an oyster bed in Kansas. CLEVELAND AMATEURS WIX . - Tacoma Team No Match for Oppo nents in Pinal Contest. OAKLAND. Cal., Oct. 24. The White Autos, of Cleveland, won the amateur . baseball championship of the world, ex f elusive of the intercollegiate games, today by beating in decisive fashion ; the South Tacoma. Wash., Tigers in the ; last of a series of three games. The i game was a procession led by the Ohio boys, who bettered the Tigers in every - department. ?. Cleveland had 14 runs before Tacoma y acored. . In the third inning, Ely. the Tiger's left-hand pitcher, was taken t out of the box, the Autos havirjj made -- dsM -hits olC hja delivery, ajiluilied I , ,i ,j4L.mui ii i in nmi n t 7-l'M j Vi-'!'?'ytrTHW "i i' ' ' ii ITUHat Coach E. J. Stewart, of the Oregn Ar Icnlrural Collee Hinr J. I.-ft ul Pete Anderson (at Rl(kt) tn the Insert. nine times. The Tigers played a loose game and had nine errors charged against them. Score: R. H. E. R. H. E. Tacoma 5 7 9Wte Autos 15 14 2 Batteries Ely, Haughland and Pat terson; Knight and Fohle. VANCOUVER TIES OREGON CITY Teams Play Scoreless Game on Field Made Heavy by Rains. VANCOUVER. Wash., Oct. 24. (Spe cial.) On a field made heavy by re cent rains, the Washington Athletic Club football team played the big braves from Oregon City to a stand still. The score was 0 to 0. Three men on the local team had never before seen a football game, but had been practising with the other players at night under a gaslight in a muddy street. Each team averaged about 175 pounds. Captain Sherry, left halfback piloted the visitors, and Gus McDonald, penter, was captain for the local team. The Washington Athletic Club will play the Vancouver Soldiers in Van couver Barracks next Sunday afternoon. ana a hard game is looked for. TWO HARVARD PLAYERS HURT Oilman and .Wallace Crippled in ' Game With Cornell Eleven. CAMBRIDGE, Mass.. Oct. 24. Har vard's football team came out of its unsuccessful contest with Cornell yes terday with Gilman. tackle, crippled so that he cannot play for two weeks, and Wallace, the center, also hurt. It is expected that Wallace will.be able to play next Saturday. Captain H. C. Flower and two other members of the lreshmen eleven were so seriously injured in a game with Worcester Academy yesterday that physicians say they cannot play again this season. TWO TIE GAMES ARE PLAYED Barracks and East Portland Have 6-6 Score; Moose and Nob Hill 7-7. Two tie games were played in Port land yesterday, one in the Inter-City Football League and the other in the SUMMER BALL KEEPING STARS OUT OF FOOTBALL Minnesota and Yale Drop Gridiron Heroes Because of Professionalism. Jefferson High Permits Wolfer, Semi-pro, to Stay in Game. BY T3-NO-ME. SCARCELY a year goes by witnout Minnesota's losing one of her star football men because of . playing baseball during the Summer with some team in organized leagues. Only last week Solon, star end for the past two seasons and captain of this Tear s varsitv eleven, was piacea un der the ban by the faculty. He may even be expelled from the university because Tie signed a statement that he was a "slraon pure athlete. It looks like poor head worn lor a man who has twice been chosen end on the third team by Walter Camp to throw away his chances for the ail American. Especially after seeing such great athletes as George Capron, Sig. Harris. Ollie Pickering and Beveral les ser lights get the ban for trying to pull the same stunt. Back in 1907. George Capron made his debut as a member of the football and as a halfback and drop-kicker there has been none better in the" big nine" conference. In the game against Wis consin, he kicked two drop kicks from the 45-yard line and one from the 25. For two years he kicked field goals with unerring accuracy from points near the center of the field and the other schools were on the lookout for something to remove his educated toe out of the way. At last a Chicago student noticed that a certain baseball player shown in Spalding's Guide resembled Capron, though his haircut was not familiar. Investigation brought to light the fact that he had played in both the North ern League and the South Atlantic League. . His playing had attratced the scouts of John McGraw, of the Giants, who secured him through draft. George was turned over to Seattle and helped win a pennant in '09. when Mike Lynch was pilot. Ralph Capron was a member of the Minnesota team, but no one thought :t necessary to look up his record, as he was not as spectacular a player is Brother George. Later, after he Joined the Pirates, it was found that he had played in the Cotton States League un der the name of- Davis. Pickering, who for the past two sea sons has been coaching the athletic teams at Arkansas University, was ex posed during his last year under Dr. Williams. George Zabel. the Chicago Cub pitch er, has for four years been playing professional baseball, and after the sea son bopa & rattier, tor Baldwin. .Kan., Cole (at Spalding football circuit. The Vancou ver Barracks eleven played the East Portland aggregation a 6-to-6 score in the inter-city league on the East Twelfth and East Davis streets grounds and at the same time the Junior Moose and Nob Hill fought to a 7-to-7 stand still in the Spalding league on the Twenty-fifth and Raleigh streets grid iron. South Portland won from the Colum bia Park second team, 7 to 0, in one of the cleanest and fastest games ever played on the South Portland bottoms. Roily Jones made all the points for the winners. All the games were played in a steady - downpour and the East Portland field was nothing less than a mudhole. A meeting of the managers in the Spalding league will be called tonight at 8 o'clock at 345 Washington street. AIL managers must be present. Holohan's Team Wins Shoot. Another match between the two teams that competed Saturday, was held at the Portland Gun Club grounds at Jenne station yesterday afternoon. This time the aggregation led by P. J. Holohan proved to be better than the one captained by J. P. Bull by 10 birds. . In the regular event J. P. Bull made a run of 72 straight and finished the day with 95 per cent. Just one bird behind P. J. Holohan, who was first. XV, C. Bristol, with a 20-gauge gun. broke 45 out of 50 in the match, and 78 per cent in the regular event. Following are the scores in the match event: R, J. Holohan 48, W. C. Bristol 45, H. R. Everding 46, H. A. Pollock 44, total 183; J. P. Bull 48, E. H. Keller 41, John C. Clemson 37, E. L. Matthews 47, total 173. The regular scores are: P. J. Holohan. S6; J. P. Bull, 95; E. L. Matthews, 94; H. R. Everding, 91; E. H. Keller. 87; H. A. Pollock, 85; W. C. Bristol, 78. and John G. Clemson, 76. Okanogan Defeats Wenatchee, 6-0. WENATCHEB. Wash., Oct. 24. (Special.) Coach Boone and his Oka nogan proteges sprang an unlooked-for surprise on Wenatchee yesterday hold ing the latter, to a 6-to-0 score. The game was hard fought from the blow ing of the whistle to the end. The con dition jf the field slowed up the plays. where he has played on the football and basketball teams of Baker Uni versity. There is a rule in Kansas that permits them to do this, if they have been in college on year before turning professional. Yale last week dropped four athletes who had technically violated the laws of amateur athletics by playing Summer baseball. Among the number was Le Gore and Pummelly, football heroes. who in other year? have starred as toe artists. Le Gore was a wonderful long distance punter last year and was counted upon to do the punting this year. Pummelly starred as a drop-kicker two years ago when he put the ball over the cross bar from the center of the field. The Yale men onlv technical v vio lated the rule as tliey were not playing ior money, -fractlce was the object in view and because of Ignorance of the rules terminated brilliant careers as Yale insists on pure athletics and a man can do Yale no greater insult than play on her teams when he knows he is ineligible. In the Northwest there is a rule against Summer baseball, but it is not rigidly enforced. Nearly all the col lege teams are harboring bush-town ball stars, but as they are all in the same fix you hear little of it. The only disbarment of the past two or three seasons was that of Emll Hauler, the big ex-Carlisle Indian, who joined the Oregon Aggies in 1912. Washington State protested Hauser 10 minutes before their annual game at Pullman, and, while this ninth-hour ex posure smacked of poor sportsmanship, there was nothing for Coach Dolan to do but keep Hauser off the team. Washington State won the game 10-9. so the loss of the big chief was the turning factor. Emil weighed about 190 pounds stripped and bobbed up that Fall in the backfield of the all-star Seattle Club team that played Multno mah two games. Multnomah won the game at Seattle and tied the second here, 0-0. Hauser was badly used at Seattle as penalty for swearing at one of the Multnomah players. Local interscholatlc league teams also harbor semi-professional ball players. Ike Wolfer. of the Jefferson team, is a fair sample. Wolfer played at For sythe. Mont., last Summer with a bunch of ex-Northwest Leaguers like Bert Lamb, Fitchner. Jimmy Mensor. Lodell. French and others, and yet he is back in town playing halfback for Jeffer son, - Eighteen Players, 2 Coaches Leave in Special Car for East Lansing, Mich. MEN ALL IN FINE SHAPE Squad Will Practice En Route for Contest With Michigan Aggies Saturday ; Record Time to Be Made on Trip Home , BY EARL R. GOODWIN. Traveling In a style that would make the most prosperous theatrical troupe green with envy, the Oregon Agricul tural College football squad, led by Dr. E. J. Stewart, their coach, departed from Portland last night on their long Journey to East Lansing, Mich. They are scheduled to appear against the Michigan Aggies on the Easterners' grounds next Saturday afternoon and If the game isn't a thriller it won't be the fault of the Oregonlans. . The squad, 20 in number, arrived from Corvallis a little before 6 o'clock last night and boarded the Union Pa cific at 7 o'clock. Quite a delegation was on hand to bid the athletes gooa bye. although it was raining hard. Flayera la Good Shape. All the players are in good condi tion. "We haven't had much opportunity to get a line on our opponents." said Coach Stewart, "so our showing will have to depend on what style they put against us when the game starts. We have arranged to practice at 3 o'clock every afternoon while on the trip east and for half an hour the train will wait until we are ready to jump in our private car." Assistant Coach Thomas E. May ac companied the team, but he is figuring on witnessing the University of Michigan-Syracuse University match at Ann Arbor, Mich., on the same day the Aggies will be defending the honor of the West on the football field. The Oregon Aggies are scheduled to play Syracuse on Multnomah Field on De cember 1, so a few pointers are needed, saya Coach Stewart Happy Throng Leaves. A chef, porter and a waiter are in cluded in the private car for the Cor vallis contingent, and everything is labeled "style." It was a mighty hap py bunch that waved a farewell to Portland until a week from Wednesday. That nothing but "speed" will be tol erated by the Oregonlans Is shown in the fact that Coach Dr. Stewart has made arrangements to come West after the game in 68 hours from Chicago, III. The private car will be hooked on the mail special train at Chicago. They will leave Chicago next Sunday 'night and on the following Wednesday morning a little after 7 o'clock will be in the Union depot in Portland. They have a game with the Univers ity of Idaho at Corvallis three days after they return from the Eastern campaign. Twenty In Party. The party which left last night in cluded Coach Stewart, Assistant Coach and Manager May, Captain Brewer H. Billie, Herman Abraham, Paul ("Gloomy Gus") Hofer, Pete Anderson, D. Ii. ("Hungry") Smyth. Francis Yea ger, Paul Hoerline, Leo Laythe, Harry J. Cole, Edward A I worth, Steve Schuster, Martin ("Midge") Allen, Lawrence Dut ton, Percy Locey, Lee Biasett. Charles M. Moist, Elmer Thompson and Meier L ("Darkhorse") Newman. Ralph Hoagland, Princeton, will ref eree, while W. W. Cox. of Ohio State, will be the umpire. The other offi cials were not made known. Another football team was a Port land visitor yesterday. This time it was the University of Oregon squad, under the direction of Coach Bezdek and Trainer William L. Hayward. The Eugene delegation was on its way home after having trimmed the Whit man College football aggregation. 21 to 0, at Walla Walla, Wash., last Sat urday. ACADEMY SQUAD OCT TO WI3f Portland School Plays Columbia University Tomorrow. Columbia University and Portland Academy will send their football teams together on Multnomah Field tomorrow afternoon in their regularly scheduled game of the Portland Interscholastic League. Strenuous efforts will be made by Coach Spec" Hurlburt and his Academy squad to wrest a victory from the collegians, because they must do so to keep in the running for the title of the circuit at the end of the 1915 season. The next big game of the schedule after the Portland Academy-Columbia University affair tomorrow is the Washington High-Lincoln High set-to on the following day. Rallies are to be called tomorrow morning and Wednesday morning, and plans have been made to dispose of more than 3000 tickets for the game. MICHIGAN AGGIES RATED HIGH Halfbacks as Fast as Any Ever Seen on Middle Wesi Fields. CHICAGO. Oct. 24. Michigan's crushing defeat by the Michigan Ag gies furnished the greatest surprise of the week-end gridiron contests in the Middle West. The Aggies, who will meet the Oregon State Agricultural College team next Saturday at Lansing, Mich., by their showing proved their claim for an important place in West ern football. Their halfbacks are de clared to be as fast as any in this part of the country. Results in the conference lert Illin ois. Minnesota and Wisconsin atill the leaders in the race for the champion' ship, withChicago a "dark horse." SCOVIIi, YALE STAR, IS HURT Halfback Stays in Game and Makes Eli's Only Score, With Broken Nose. NEW HAVEN. ' Conn.. Oct. 24. To add to the gloom whlcb has been in evidence in the Yale football camp for some -time, it was learned tonight that "Mai" Scovil, the backfield star, had suffered a broken nose in the Waah-ing-ton and Jefferson same. He prob ably will be unable to play any more this season. Scovll's injury came early in the same, but he said nothing of it. and later made Yale's only touchdown. His loss is a severe blow, especially as he had taken Legroe's place, following the latter's disqualification. Cottage Gro-re Defeats Shedd. SHEDD, Or.. Oct. 2. (Special.) The Shedd High School football team met with the second defeat of the sea son from the Cottage Grove High School Saturday by a score of 16 to 7. W. Couey. Shedd's quarterback, picked tip a fumble and ran 50 yards foa a touchdown, if Keep Away From Drugs LAXATIVES and cathartics, used continuously, only ac centuate the condition they are meant to cure. Nujol, a pure, white mineral oil, is the recognized common-sense remedy . for constipation. . It conforms to the requirements of the well-known Lane treatment. Nujol is odorless and tasteless, absolutely neutral, and is not digested or absorbed into the system. It acts merely as a mechanical lubricant. Nujol is not a drug. Its use will not give quick, temporary relief. But Nujol is a genuine remedy in that it relieves constipation in the most natural way by lubricating the lin ing of the intestines, softening the intestinal contents, and thus promoting healthy and normal bowel activity. STAN DARD OIL. COM PANY (New Jersey) Bayonne New Jersey 19 M a"" M"S"s I A PURE w fta I 1 uU -3 . I kmtkiV '.-.v.: AmiKtVKm f - I " j mM ii ... D4UALOIL i 1 J 7. DOM: Um v"-l t I '. '- 1 i f-rti , 1 r , 1 I ' 4 C 1 5,'"N5 V C-l.--. J I i, EUGENE TEAM LOSES Waverley Golfers Have Run away Victory in Storm. FINAL SCORE IS 71 TO 7 Georgo I'. Anderson Wins Handicap Tourney on Portland Links for C. C. Gross Trophy With Total of 89 and Net of 74. Again the Eugene Golf Club failed to win from the Waverley Country Club golfers in the return Inter-club match held on the Waverley Country Club links yesterday. The Waverley team had little trouble in humbling the rep resentatives from Eugene, the locals winning 71 to 7 by the Nassau scoring system. According to this system one point Is given for each nine holes and one point for the match. James Sellers, Jack Caskodden. Hugo Bezdek. R. W. Pres cott. and Walter McCormack were the only members on the visiting squad that were able to score, while every player on the Waverley team with the exception of Guy Standifer, and J. E. Stephenson scored for the winners. The wind and rain affected the scor ing, but R. P. Tisdale led the field with an SO' in the morning and a 79 in the afternoon for a total of 159. Following are the scores made in the match yesterday: Waverley A.M. P.M. To'l. S. R. Hall 3 3 B J. E. Stephenon u o J. H. Lxnhrop 3 16 Guy Standifer 0 0 Jack Astburv ............. .2 i - M. H. Hartwell 2 - 4 R. Wilder a 3 o C. H. Davis 2 3 o Ellin Brass 2 3 S R. P. Tifdale 3 3 6 J. R. Straight 3 3 to G. Voorhles 3 3 B John Young 3 3 B C. E. Miller 3 3 t F. B. Dudlev 0 ". a W. A. Pettygrove 3 3 Totals 34 37 11 Fnpn A.M. P.M. To'l. E. J. Flnneran 0 o o Huko Beidel 0 1 Harry Powell O Jack Pratt lr.h. U l h.lm O 0 Jansa Sellers 1 2 I lark CBrsk ftriduB .............. 1 V 1 F. C. Aver 0 O 01 R. W. Prescott 1 0 1 Waltap Vi.rnrmul ............ 1 O. 1 A. E. Tiffany 0 0 E. O. Immell 5 Pant T.rnrn O O Harrvbunhar 0 0 01 Frank Uairl.tt 0 0 0 1 Juv T.ewlji 0 0 0 Totals 3 George F. Anderson, well-known traffic expert, was returned the win ner in the handicap golf tourney for the C. C. Gross trophy yesterday over the links of the Portland Golf Club. Mr. Anderson made the first nine, in 48 and then turned in a 41 for the second nine, giving htm a gross 89. His handicap was 15. so his net score wa 74. the lowest on the board. Owing to the rain which sloshed down most of the day few women were out. and Miss Ioma Imes, the club champion, easily captured the H. .La. Keats trophy. The most popular song at the club last night was "I Should Have Raised My Clubs to Be an Um brella," a take-off on that other popu lar ballad of the links. "I Didn't Raise My Head to Be a Golfer." Despite the superfluous moisture. however, 17 men finished the necessary 18 holes in the Gross competition. Ru- djolph, Wilhelm. state soil champion.1 TsFuiol I keo. u.s. km; xJf or fW, A PURE WHITE MINERAL OIL Write for "The Rational Treatment - of Constipation, an informative treatise on constipation. If you can not get Nujol from your drugeist, ws will send you a pint bottle prepaid to any point in the U nited States on re ceipt of 75c money was out after a month's idleness on the links and he made an 88 for a net 84. Scores follow: Handl Gross. cap. Net. G. F. Anderson Srt I' J. A. Dick : 14 7 C C. Grow ." 14 tl J. M. Antun !W 14 2 J. T. Hotchklsa f'H 14 fa K. S. Hall P! IS 4 Rudolph Wilhelm 88 4 S4 Sam. B. Archer 102 IS S O. H. Abercromble 103 17 S O. R. Maria Ill 14 88 H. H. Pearce 102 IS 89 W. D. Scott 10.1 15 90 C. B Lynn 109 19 90 John Dickeon 110 17 93 Dr. T. w. Watts 11". O '95 Arthur Dickson 107 10 97 F. A. Heitkemper 128 IS 10 Several games remain to be played in the second round of the Golfers' Maga zine trophy competition. On Saturday J. M. Angus eliminated F. S. Gray by making a 43 and a 42 for a total of 85. BASKETBALL SEASOX OPENS Toomey's and Edwards Fives Win in Multnomah Club Ijeaguc. - The opening games of the house bas ketball league of the Multnomah Ama teur Athletic Club were played yes terday morning in the club gymnasium. Ray Toomey's aggregation walked on William R. Smyth's representatives, while the other match went to Law rence Edwards and his teammates over Dave Welch's contingent by the score of 19 to 3. But one field basket was made by the Welch team, and that was scored by George Anderson, a substitute. The other point came as a result of a foul. The next games will be played in the club gymnasium next Thursday night. Soccer Game Played at Centralia. CENTRA LI A, Wash.. Oct. 24. (Spe cials In the Grammar School Soccer The History of the World From the Dawn of Creation until The Great War Is depicted in art, scenic and industry and presented in wonderful colors Panama-Pacific Exposition ' San Francisco This wonderful Exposition closes Dec 4th Don't Miss It Lest you always look back to 1015 with regret Scenic Shasta Route Through the wonderful Valleys of the Wil lamette, the Sacramento, the Umpqua and the Rogue offers exceptional diversion. Low Round Trip Fares Full particulars with copy of booklet "Wayside Notes, Shasta Route" or "California and Its Two World Expositions" on application to nearest agent. SOUTHERN PACIFIC John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. 11 order or stamys. League the Lincoln School team yes terday defeated the Logan School by a score of 6 to 0 in, a well-played game. Alexander Wins for Nationals. OMAHA. Neb.. Oct. 24. In a game replete with errors the All-Nationals defeated the All-Americans today. 8 to 6. Alexander held the American Leaguers to seven hits. Score: R. H. E. R. H. E. Nationals -.8 14 3 Americans -5 7 9 Batteries Alexander and McCarty: James, Ayres and Cady. Hrppncr and lone Play Tie. IONE. dr., Oct. 24. (Special.) The football game between the Heppner High School and the lone HlRh School resulted in a tie. The game was played at the lone High School ground. GOTHSC THE NEW 2 ror 25c COLLAR IT FITS THE CRAVAT CLUCTT. PEABODY a. CO.. INC Hamas