TITE' 3I0RXIXG . OREGOXTAX, 3IOXDAY, . OCTOBER 21, 1918. CIP LEWIS WINS leading sportsmen of Southern Califor nia, to attend a great mountain-lion hunt, the date of 'which has been tenta tively set for about November 1. h Henry Abels.. Deputy Commissioner for Santa Barbara County, is seconding Barnett enthusiastically and Is under stood to have arranged to attend with a dozen or more crack shots and old llnie mountain-lion hunters from the anta Ynez, Lompoc and Sisquoc sec tions. A number of Los Angeles sportsmen also are expected to accept the invitation. The lions are said to be particularly numerous this year menacing stock and deer. Barnett's plan has been perfected in the hope that other California counties will hold a succession of similar hunts & Soldier Football Team Tears Holes in Shipbuilders. FINAL SCORE IS 21 TO 0 so that the entire state may be rid of the "varmints.". A motion picture company is plan ning to film the hunt. 19 FROM I T ON ti.tr iS1- liW I - -- - Fifteen Thousand Enlisted Men and A Officers Watch. Gam With ileven From Portland. r BT JAMES J. RICHARDSON. CAMP LEWIS. Wash.. Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) George Dewey and his IS husky athletes from the foundation " ship yards of Portland managed to evade the eagle eyes of the Camp Lewis military police here today and essayed to take Captain T. G. Cook s gridiron warriors Into camp, but the portlanders were treated to a rude awakening and lost, 21 to . Foundation had as much chance of beating the Camp Lewis gridironers as Kaiser Bill has to have coffee and doughnuts in this big cantonment. The shipyard line was crashed through at will, while Dewey's men were unable to penetrate the Camp Lewis defense. Soldiers Opea Bis; Holes. The soldiers opened some gigantic holes in foundations line and the backfield went tearing through with the speed of a "2-centimeter gun. Thev excelled foundation at every branch of the great college game. We'll bare to apologize for that statement. It's the Army and Navy game now. fully 15.000 khaki-clad warriors lined the big athletic field and I almost brushed elbows with Major-General Leitch. who was an interested specta tor. It seemed that every Portlander, soldier and officer was at the game. If there were any absent I 'didn't miss them. Even Private Harry Gray lodged "K. P." Jong enough, to watch the fracas. First Toichdows Scored. Camp Lewis scored their first touch down tn the second quarter when after a series of line bucks and end runs. In cluding a forward pass. Bigbee to Hoer line for SO yards. Huyck carried the ball over for the first score. Huyck fcicked goal. Score Camp Lewis 7, Foundation 0. Captain Cook sent in some of his capable reserves. Blsckwell for Oberle, and Bougan for Boyd, and these gladi ators, with the assistance of Lyle Big bee, soon chased across another touch down, Bougan carrying the ball over and Huyck kicking goal. Score End third quarter. Camp Lew is 14. Foundation 0. Near the close of the last quarter Camp Lewis put on full speed ahead and carried the ball up to founda tion's 12-yard line, when a beautiful pass, Bigbee to Mutch, scored the final touchdown. Skadan kicked goal. final score Camp Lewis SI. Foun dation 0. Condition told In today's game. The soldiers were in the pink. Louttit Hortea, Cook and Webster were the bright stars for foundation. Oberle, Biackwell. Bougan. Bigbee, Huyck and fcelph. In fact everyone on the Boldter eleven, played a hangup game. Lineup: foundation- Camp Lewis. ' Vi-i'ullom I B Bpooner Louttit L. T stark Kendall L. U UalRh Harbour C s-lpli .Hauard R G Bodcera re.liltn K T uumop arlion R K Hoerllne Cook R It Boyd Avebater t H Bicbee Kvim Kull Obvrle Horton j Huyck Score by period: Foundation 0 0 0 00 Camp Ll O J i -l Touchdowns lluvrk. btousan and Mutch Roals. Hnvck Skadan I. Suhatltutlona Foundation. Walker for Barbour. Barbour or t;ans. Larmon tor rjvans; camp i.ewi. Bounn for Bovd. Biackwell for Oberle. Skadan for Huyck. Daert for Dunlop. Hoyd for Boutin. Mulch tor Jloernne. renames, foundation yarda. Camp Lewis five yards, rifttti: Referee. Lieutenant Carr: umpire. Lieutenant Hunter; head linesman. Lieuten ant Reed. VETERAX IS HERO OF RACE ALLIES TAKE TO BASEBALL Instruction and Equipment Are In Demand In Europe. NEW TORK, Oct. 20. The popularity of baseball among the allied nation abroad is spreading so rapidly that there Is already a demand for simpl instructions and rules of the game, printed in foreign languages. To mee these requirements several expert base ball authorities are collaborating In th preparation of a baseball primer which will be distributed in various section of Europe. The pamphlet, which will be printed in French, Italian, English and Spanish, will carry the rules of the game in th simplest form. In addition there will be pages of explanations and answers to the questions -which arise among those who are playing their first con tests. These' questions and answers will be printed both In English and various foreign languages in parallel columns in order that when American and foreign players or spectators meet, -without being able to speak the lan guage of their opponents or neighbors in the stands, there may be a medium of communication at hand. A glossary of technical and baseball terms in all languages is also to be appended. 5 TEAMS WILL ENTER FIELD ALL-STAR ELEVEN WILL- RUX UP AGAINST RIVALS. Liberty Team Has Issued Challenge and Starts Practice Tonight. Arlcla Anxious to Clash. 31 sn With Wounded Leg- Gets Ova tlon When. He Swims Jn Paris. fsport and -war were strangely mingled In the recent tfeine swim, the big sport event ot the year in i-aris. The hero of the race down the cjeine through Paris, a distance of about seven and one-third miles, was not the winner, but the man who finished last of the male competitors. He was Charles Nungesser. the champion avi ator, who though still hampered by wounds not yrf. completely healed, his left leg In fact -became useless early In the race, persevered to the end and fin ished in 3 hours and 43 minutes, re ceiving a greater welcome from the thousands lining the banks than even the winner. The French are not usually regarded as an athletic nation, but this race, or ganised every year, attracted 31 entries, of whom 2S started and 22 13 men and nine women) finished, without count-pi Ing the veteran George Paulus, agedl 68. the winner or this event in isva. who gave an exhibition swim, coming In sixth. The winner was George Michel, a gunner in the heavy artil lery, whose time was 3 hours 3 minutes. The first woman to arrive, Suzanne Wurts. came in sixth in 3 hours 19 minutes, followed by Juliette Cardelle, in 3 hours 21 minutes. Women took the 12th. 15th. ISth. 20th and 21st places, the last but one being a little girl. Henrlette Gardelle. only 13 years old, who with a handicap of half an hour, finished In 4 hours 43 minutes. XEW CAMP BUILDS A TEAM Kearney Has Came Scheduled for Xcxt Saturday In .Los Angeles. CAMP KEARNEY. San Diego, Cal Oct. 20. Strenuous work Is going on here looking toward production of a football team which shall satisfy ath letic officers of its worthiness to rep resent the ISth Division. About 40 men are practicing daily under the eyes of Joseph A. Pipal, local athletic director for the Y. M. C. A., and sometime men tor of Occidental college athletes. Because of the newness of this divi sion and Its great proportion of re cruits to the trrined soldiers. Pipal Is finding It difficult to obtain material, specially as the recruits are held in quarantine three weeks after arrival. Some of the younger officers have come to his aid, however, and any day about 4 o'clock groups of them may be seen in football togs awaiting the hour of practice. The division's first scheduled game Is October 2, against a picked Navy team representing the submarine base and Naval reserve station at San Pedro. It will be played at Los Angeles. I.IOX HUNT TO BE HELD Invitations Sent Out by California Game Commission. VENTURA. Cal., Oct. 20. Jack Bar nett. Deputy estate Flsa and Game Commissioner for Ventura County, is sending invitation! to many of the The announcement that an all-star independent football eleven was being formed and was ready for all comers has at last awakened the independent football players, and five teams are now getting ready to enter the field and claim the independent championship ot Oregon. The All-Stars met yesterday after noon and elected Dick Sharp manager. It was decided to name no set captain, but let that honor alternate between Bob Tucker and "Ick" DeCuman. The name of the team is still up in the air, but one will be decided upon before the end of the week. When pruned down the average weight of the team will be about 175 pounds, but enough light men will be on the squad to shoot them in to lower the weight average so that the team can tackle elevens averaging from 143 pounds up. The latest team to issue challenges is the Liberty Eleven, an aggregation of former newsboys and independent players. Abe Brown, for three years halfback and quarter of the fast news boys' team, is manager and captain, first practice has been called for to night. Bill Kurtz, who starred for sev eral seasons with South Portland, will play one of the halfback positions, and men of equally well-known ability will be on the squad. Arleta has played several practice games this season and is anxious to clash with any teams in the city. A crack team is organizing at St. Johns, and Albina will also put a squad on the gridiron. LEWIS PROSPECTS GOOD COACH T. G. COOK -TEACHES YOUNGSTERS TEAM WORK. Ira Biackwell, Former O. A. C. Star, Turns Out In Suit and Shows His Old Form. CAMP LEWIS. Tacoma. Wash., Oct. 20. (Special.) Quite a stir was occa sioned here when a big husky soldier asked for a football suit here last night. The athlete was none other than Ira Biackwell, the famous Oregon Agricultural College star of a few years back and more recently of the University of Montana. Biackwell, who at present is a member of the 166th Depot Brigade, spun around the field in bis old-time form, but he was not kept out very long. While the prospects for a sensa tional team are not as bright as they were last year. Captain T. G. Cook, ath letic officer, is in hopes of organizing an eleven that will hold its own with any of them. Most of the players turn ing out now are youngsters at the game, but they are willing workers, and the main .thing that is getting at tention at present Is better team work. Several candidaes are expected to arrive with the new draft and members of the athletic office are keeping their eyes peeled for everything that looks like good material for a moleskin artist. Practices are being held every afternoon between 3:30 and 6 o'clock and more than three full teams attend the workouts under the direction ot Coach Lieutenant Eddie Kienholz. After several months of research work," Captain T. G. Cook, athletic officer for Camp Lewis, has had published . 88 recreative games selected from Major Herman J. Koehler's Manual, Captain T. J. Brown's System and the English Supplementary Tables. The rules for playing the games have been distrib uted throughout the cantonment by the athletic officer's Staff. The contests, while primarily ar ranged for the benefit of conditioning men in the various training camps, have become so popular that they are being used for recreational purposes. All of them can be used by playground in structors who have found -that the old time-worn games for their proteges have become threadbare from constant use. Anyone Interested in the work can secure a list and rules from Cap tain T. u. cook, athletic officer. Camp Lewis, American Lake. Wash. IT 1 "I' V 1 Listen, People! If you are not fully satisfied after smoking half the box, return the balance to 37 Drumm Street,San Francisco, and receive in exchange a THRIFT STAMP. Vfho takes the risk? -The Quality of Old Egypt ! ! A Corporation TWENTY" nts mu ifs sa i inxHS: or A: 25 Ce n linn it mil a in inn mia imi in nniiTii i" 11 a i iii-ii i irnr r "I r- " '" " J" - ' ' " ' ' " ' PERRY GOES TO PHILADELPHIA American Baseball League Pays $2500 for Twirlcr. - BOSTON. Oct. 20. The Philadelphia American League baseball club obtained undisputed claim - to Pitcher Scott Perry by paying J2500 to the Boston National League club in settlement out of court of the Boston club's conten tion that Perry was the property of the Braves when the Athletics obtained an injunction against his playing for Boston. The Philadelphia club had tba use of Perry all last season. EX-CHAMPiOHS IN WANT WOLGAST AXD BATTLING NEL SON' IX POOR SHAPE. Ad Trying to Regain Health Work Ins In Woods; "The Battler" Is IDoivn and Out in Chicago. CHICAGO, Oct 20. Eight years ago In Point Richmond, Cal., Battling Nel son, the "Durable Dane," of the ring, and Ad Wolgast. a rugged young "wild cat" from Michigan, fought one of the bloodiest and most desperate battles for the lightweight championship ever staged. After 40 rounds of terrible fighting. Nelson, the champion, being all but blinded, was waved to his cor ner the loser, Wolgast became the new lightweight champion. The referee had called a halt when both men were hammered to a pulp. The "gate" for the encounter totaled 132,000. and Nel son received the lion's share. Today the conqueror, Wolgast, un able to obtain a penny of the fortune he earned in the ring, is doing odd jobs in the timber country of Northern "Wis consin, where, he is trying to regain health. His wealth, estimated at $150, 000, is in custody of his wife and his mother, who are living in Cadillac, Mich., Wolgast's home. The Michigan Wildcat, as Wolgast was known, became the new idol of ringdom by yirtue of his victory over Nelson, then regarded as unbeatable. for two years Wolgast gathered the riches of a champion, meeting claim ants in ehort contests for purses reach ing from $4000 to $12,000. He "cleaned up" before he faced Willie Richie, .a San Francisco newcomer, and lost his title on a foul In 1912, after 16 rounds of vicious battling. The vanquished. Nelson, the marveled "Durable Dane," today is in ft, Chicago hospital, down and out, flat broke, suf fering from an illness threatening pneumonia. He has appealed to friends for enough money to pay his hospital expenses. His ring fortune of $250,000 is tied up in real estate in Hegewich, HI., his home, and every penny of it is in the custody of his father. Nelson is regarded as "land poor." Nelson, whose boast is that he was always on the level and never misled his friends, is not asking for charity, but .wants some of the $250,000 he loaned in the old days of great pros perity. Some of the friends Nelson as sisted are in excellent financial cir cirrnstances, capable of reimbursing him. Willie Ritchie Expected at Camp. CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Wash., Oct 20. (Special.) Word has teen re ceived here by Captain T. G. Cook, athletic officer for the 13th Division at Camp Lewis, that Willie Ritchie, the cantonment's boxing instructor, would arrive from the East some time next week. Ritchie has been taking a spe cial two weeks' course in bayonet work at Camp Gordon, Georgia, and, according to his Tetters to officials iere, he expects to introduce some new stunts along with his boxing work among the soldier boys. He has been suffering with the "flu," but last re ports were to the effect that he was himself once again. Mrs. Bousfield Wins Plate. ABERDEEN, Wash., Oct 20. (Spe cial.) The handsome plate for which the women of the Grays Harbor Coun try Club have been contesting every Wednesday since last January, has been won for the third time in hand icap to par play by Mrs. Fayette Bous field. This is called the Captain's trophy, as it was presented by Mrs. J. B. Bridges, woman's golf captain at the club. It is the custom to award the trophy to the woman who has won the play three times, and it then be comes her personal property. Swimmers to Join Xavy. NEW YORK, Oct 20. Duke Kahana moku, Harold Kruger and Clarence Lane, Hawaiian swimming champions, will enlist in the Navy and be sent to the Pelham Bay Naval training sta tion, it was announced last night DAUBERT CONTRACT RELIC ECHO OP BASEBALL WAR IS HEARD IX COURT, Forty-five Thousand Dollars for Five Seasons' Playing Promised Dodger Second Baseman. What' is probably one of the last of the special baseball wartime contracts, which star players insisted the mag nates should sign in order to retain their services, during the days when the Federal League was raiding the major circuits, was spread before the public recently. When Jake Daubert, first baseman of the Brooklyn Na tionals, carried his appeal to the Na tional Commission for the balance of his salary due under this interpretation of his contract, the special articles in the same were announced as follows: "The club agrees to pay the player, for the seasons of 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917 and 1918, beginning on or about the 14th day of April in each of eaid years, and ending on or about the 14th day of October, in each of said years, a sal ary at the rate of $9000 per season." In addition this contract had eliminated from It the paragraph known as the ten days' notice of release clause, and also had inserted therein the following: "It is further understood and agreed that the services of the party of the second part shall not be released, as signed, traded or" transferred, without the consent of the party of the second part." It is very doubtful, according to the baseball magnates, if a contract con taining similar clauses ' favoring the player will receive the signature of club owners for many years to come. An agreement giving a salary of $45, 000 to an athlete for approximately 30 months' work, with an annotation which makes it impossible to dispense with his services without the consent of the player, is going to be a rarity, well worth framing in the future, if I the baseball club owners ar to b be lieved. BASKETBALL- GAMES SOUGHT Portland Boy Caplains- Quintet at Camp Ijewis. CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma, Wash., Oct 20. (Special.) Private W. Lee Waldron has been mas a captain" and manager of the Base Hospital basketball team as a result of the resignation i rnvaie fighting Medics' famous baseball team this Summer and maae a wonaeriui showing, but he has been transferred to the 13th Division Surgeon's office and he cannot find the time to dabble 111 L I 11 II. Lll.'l J U 1 L a- J.l... Private Waldron Is a Portland boy ana maae quite a repuiauuu aa a. uao ketshooter while attending the.Lin ,nin TTio-h Rlinnl. Wfl has been keen ing in condition of late and he has an- nouncea xnax nis aggregation is uut to tangle with any basketball team in th Mnrthvual 14m rnn he reached in care of the X-Ray Laboratory, Base Hospital, camp Lewis, wasn. xie win enter his auintet in the regimental championships. ROBERTS IX SEMI - FINALS Former " Junior Racquet Champion Playing in. Sacramento. eppirMrn Cnl Ort. 20. Roland -DnhA-a rr ;, Pfnnpkpn former Cali fornia junior singles champion, playing under heavy handicap, nas won nis way into the semi-finals of the joint Red n.AB, invtiDtinnni hnndican singles ten nis tournament Roberts disposed of some of the best players in oacramemo In the preliminary rounds, and in most lnataAAe wnn with P H S P deSDite the big handicap under which he played. Roberts, who is stationed at Mather Aviation Field, near here, was to meet u- u fAT.a,iffhlin fRprfltrh) in one of the semi-final matches today. The other match will be Detween Aaoipnus Ronnett (15-30) and . A. Brown (30). Both are local players. Winners of the two matches today were to me'et in the finals tomorrow. COLE CADDIES ON STRIKE SPOKAXE COCXTRY CLUB FACES HIGHER WAGE DEMAXD. President Merryweather Suggests That Players Finish Season With out Help From Youths. SPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 20. (Spe cial.) Although golf has been declared a non-essential by the War Depart ment, the ruling has not deterred 13 caddies at the Spokane Country Club from striking for wartime wages. The strikers handed a petition to the club board requesting that the wage scale be raised from 20 to 25 cents an hour for sinsrle bags and to 40 cents an hour for carrying double. Only six of the caddies refused to strike. "The matter has not been taken be fore the board, but if my recommenda tion is taken the striking caddies will be told to remain away from the course ( and the members will finish tne sea son without their services," said Wal ter Merryweather, president of the club. Tom Hue-hes. professional, of the Spokane Country Club, has handed his resignation to the board of directors of the organization, to take effect Oc tnher 31. The resignation has been ac cepted by the board and Mr. Hughes will sever his connection with the local golf organization, according to an an- nouncement ay air. mmjtuiti, Aviators Talk of Hockey Team. pt5ipTT.W IV u u , flnt. 9 0 T) Pr, in talk in Eastern Canada, according to Ottawa dispatches, of forming a hookey i -nm armv avinlnr, nnur tritininf for overseas service with the Canadian forces. Among lue eugioico aro jitma. Fowler and Frank Foyston, two mem- i - r l,El WInlAr'a KattlA tanm in U61B VI ' " " the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. Read The Oregonian classified ada.