14 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1920 FARMER ATHLETES SHOW FOR TRUCK 13 Letter Winners Are Out at Corvallis. CHANCES APPEAR BRIGHT train legs. Vernon plays Chicago at vvasnington park tomorrow after noortt Xiive me two more pitchers and mey won t stop us," said Esick to day. 'Til get pitchers to replace By ron Houck and Rex Dawson. Bill. the San Diego boy. will fill the shoes of Joe Finneran. The Tanks owe me a couple of pitchers," Houck and Dawson have notified the club that they are through with the grand and glorious pastime. Finneran, who refused to come. west for anything short of the city hall, was turned back to the New 'York Americans, which club sold him to Akron. Coach Hargiss and Trainer Butler Laboring Hard Over Promising Material for Spring Meets. OREGON AGRICULTURAL. COL-t-KGS, March 18. (Special.) Aggie track men are working hard every day under Coach Hargiss and Trainer "Dad" Butler. The work so far has been principally for condition and form, but beginning with the next term, which opens on March 29. real work on speed and distance will be taken up. This will allow but two weeks to prepare the men for the Columbia indoor meet, which is to be held in Portland April 10. Full teams of both freshmen and varsity ath letes will be entered in this meet, ac cording to Coach Harglss. Most of the early work has been Indoors, duo w recent rains, and it will probably be held indoors until after the Columbia meet. Then, if weather will permit, the outdoor track will be used! Some of the dis- Marquard Wins for Dodgers. JACKSONVILLE. Fla.. March IS. Marquard and Mammaux together took the Dodgers to a 3-0 victory over the Yankees today. The score: . . R. H. E. Brooklyn (N.). .- 3 9 1 New Tork (A.) 0 5.1 Batteries Marquard, Mammaux and hlliott, Miller; McGraw, Mays and Hannah. CLUB-GIRD CAME LIKELY SOLDIER MAXAGER ADVOCATES TITULAR SERIES. V Si Simonsen Holds Preliminary Plans Calling for Contests Should Be Fulfilled. tance men have been taking on good deal of cross-country work, for conditioning. Varnlty-Fro.h Meet Scbednled. A practice meet between the var sity and freshman squads will be heM indoors on the Saturday following the opening of the third term. A goodly number of freshmen stars are out for positions and no cinch for the varsity is expected. There are three men on the Aggie squad this year who have won letters in track two different years and 10 more who have won one letter each Captain Eikelman, Carter and Damon are the three double-letter men, Eikelman is rapidly recovering from a broken jaw, which has caused him considerable trouble lately. He has been forced to take liquid food for more than a month, but should rap idly recover strength when a cast is removed. Carter is going strong in the sprints, and Snook and W. Greene, the two latter of last year's rook team, look like a good combination for the short distance runs. Other ;ood men are out, however, and may 'develop strong competition for places on the team. Point Winner Turn Out. Word has been received here that Radcliffe, who performed on the hurdles last year for the Aggies, will return to college next quarter, and will turn out. Swan and McCormack are consistent on the. 880-yard and mile run, and will be relied on for points. A number of other men are going strong for these runs, among these being Lucas, who is a letter man from 1916; Bullard. Ford. Rey nolds, Durham and Rose. The 440 yard will see Rose, Anderson and Kellogg in action, as well as E. Greene. Field event men are Eikelman, Metzler, Waite, Ross, Luebke, Snook, Powell. Heyden. Damon and Butler. Several of these have previously earned official letters in track. Coach Hargiss intends to enter men In the Pacific coast relay games, which will be held in Seattle April 24. There will be a dual meet with Stan ford at Palo Alto May 8. and a week later the Pacific coast conference meet at the same place. Dual meets with University of Oregon and Uni versity of Washington will be held on the home grounds on May 22 and i9, respectively. The management of the Multnomah Guard basketball team has not given up the plan of staging a series of games with the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club, despite a failure to get a favorable reply from the clubmen. and is endeavoring to reopen negotia tions. "As previously planned." said Man ager Si Simonsen of the Guard team last night, "we were to meet the winged-M players the last of the sea son, it being agreed that both teams would close the season with these games. The 'fans have looked for ward to this event and daily make in qu.rles of both team managers as to the dates. It is not fair and equitable in this instance to disappoint the fans, for the success of the game rests with them; consequently, I am ready, on behalf of the Guard, to meet the club players in a one, two or three game series at any time that can be arranged. The clubmen have had a very successful season; so have we. And, speaking for our followers and a number of neutral fans whom I meet daily, I believe that the two teams should meet this season for the good of the sport, as well as the mutual satisfaction of the two organ izations sponsoring thesV teams." KILLEiHR OUTFIELD PLEASES TflAPSHOOIGKI TO GIVE EXHIBITION Charley Spencer Portland Visitor as Guest. 11 -YEAR'-' AVERAGE .9677 Longest Recorded Run Is 565; Demonstration to Be Staged at Gun jClub Two-Day Tourney. ' YOUNG BEVOS GET IB HITS PORTLAND SECONDS . ONLY GRAB TWO DOZEN' RUN'S. Long Beach Elks Are Cruelly Mauled In Ragged Contest With Coast Juniors. LONG BEACH. Cal.. March 18. (Special.). The Portland second team defeated the Long Beach Elks here this afternoon, 24 to 3. The contest was rather ragged, as it was played on a skinned diamond which had many bumps on it. Long Beach used three pitchers in an effort to stop the Portland sluggers, with little success, as the Beavers annexed 18 safe swats, including home runs by Barnabe and Jarvis. Johnson pitched the first four in nings tor me Beavers, allowing sia hits and 3 runs. Two of these came when a ball took a lucky bound. hopping over Gettschine's shoulder. Libke. who pitched the last five in nings, allowed no runs and only three scattered hits. Sutherland, who played right field for the Beavers was the hitting star, getting six safe ones in seven times up. one of them a triple. The Portland team was a patched affair. ,with Cuyler. Jarvis and Suth erland in the outfield. Barnabe on first. Gettschine on second, an On tario man at short and fetufit on third. The score: R. H. Portland. 2d 24 18 Long Beach 3 8 Batteries Johnson, Libke and Baker; Delporte, Dovey, Tucker and Malin, Spurgeon. s Holdout McAuley Likely (o Lo1 j Berth to Better Player. LOS ANGELES, Cal., March 18. (Special.) "Don't care whether Kim- my McAuley reports or not, said Manager Wade Killefer, Los Angeles, at the conclusion of the Seraphs labor at the Vernon ball park today. The fiery domed pilot of 1919 runner ups had been raving over the work pf Tex McDonald and Eddie "Spec" Burke, the former Jefferson high school boy of Portland. Or. Burke is shortstop and McDonald a third baseman obtained from St. Paul. Mc Auley, short-patcher, sent to the coast by the St. Louis Nationals, is holding out for more dough. Killefer declared hat with McDonald, Burke and Bert Niehoff to look after the left side of his infield he Is not worrying about McAuley. The Angels commenced to work out at 10:30 A. M. aiid hit up a fast clip until 2:30 o'clock. Both Art Griggs and Rube Ellis, suffering from Spanish influenza, which they picked up at Elsinore. are on the happy road to recovery. Killefer's men labor at Vernon again tomorrow and on Satur day and Sunday scrimmage against the Chicago Cubs at Washington park. Portland trapshooting followers who will compete in the two-day regis tered tournament, which ,will get under way at the Portland gun club tomorrow morning, will not only have tire opportunity to powder as many out of 400 registered targets as they can hit, but will also have, ihe chance to witness the world's greatest trap- shooter in action during tomorrow s and Sunday's shooting. This said personage is Charles G. Spencer of St. Louis. Mr. Spencer ar rived here Friday as the guest of the Portland gun club and is known the globe over as the worlds greatest Drofessional scatter gun artist. For 11 years Charley Spencer lias been one of the real top-notchers in the trapshooting game and his aver age for this 11-year period rar ex cels that of any other trapsnooter n the world. Not once in these 11 years has his average Deen lower than 96, meaning by this that he has always been able to break more than 96 targets in every hundred all the way up in the thousands, for Spencer has fired at close to 5000 targets a year in registered tournaments. Kleven-Year Average .0077. Spencer's average for 11 years is .9677. He shot at 63,435 targets and brolre 51.706. . Twice in this period has he led all the trapshooters in the country in the averages in 1909, and. 191.1. No shooter has ever equaled his mark of 1909, that of averaging .9720 on more than 8000 targets, nor has anyone ever touched his 1915 figures when he. averaged .9750 on nearly 6000 targets. In 1909 at Viola, 111., Spencer compiled a run ot oto straight, meaning that he broke 565 targets in succession. The shoot lasted two days. Spencer broke the entire programme of 200 targets each day. and then on the second day he continued for a record. After break ing 565 he was forced to discontinue shooting because he had no more shells. This record still holds good. Knenr.er is of the opinion that his record run is more than 700 straight. ha claims to have broken in the neighborhood of 150 straight in the next' shoot he went to after leaving Viola, but as he has" been unable to locate the figures his record will have to stand as it appears in the record book 565 straight. Father Defeated Early. Spencer began his shooting career l .lersevvi le. 111., in AUgUSl, 100:7, innin a. irold medal and a silver - D . . . . : j t. : f il, ... cup. In one event ne ncu xjia h heat his "dad" on the snoot-on. He came along gradually, and in 1906 he won the southern handicap, with 98 breaks in 100 from 20 yards. He won the professional championsnip oi v, T-nifArt States in 1910. was the high average shooter at doubles tar gets in 1915 and 1916, and in 1917 won the Hazard trophy, emblematic of the world's doubles targets championship. Brown, a .senior from Amity, was'fhe choice, for the baseball captaincy, while Robbin Fisher, a junior of Salem, was elected to lead the track team. Brown had varsity experience before enlisting In the navy during the war and was elected to fill the vacancy left by Oscar Olson, former .captain-elect, who left the university last semester. FisheV has had a year's experience in college track work, his specialty being the middle-distance events. To day is set as the date for baseball and -track men to report for duty. DOUBLED TEAM LOSES MEET California Defeats Redlands and ' 'Pomona In Track Sport. BERKELET. Cal.. March 18. The University of California track team defeated the combined teams of the University of Redlands and Pomona college, 80 to 42. yesterday. Red- lands men were credited with 24 J points ana Pomona with 18. William Youht, captain of the Red lands team, starred with an individual score or 16 points. EDDIE HON DUE TO MEET ANDERSON Friday Night Bouts to Be Staged in Armory. LIST ALMOST COMPLETE Palace several years ago know that Frankie has the goods and he showed move " class thaTJ any other welter weight that has appeared here In his bout with "Scotty" Williams the oth ther night, barring perhaps Morris Lux. Thirteen Pitchers Are Used. SAN BENITO. Tex., March 18. Thir teen pitchers' appeared in the Cardi nal Athletic exhibition today, St. Louis winning, 13 to 7. The score: National . Athletic R. H. E. R. H. E. St. Louis ..13 15 5;Ph'aelphia.. 7 10 Batteries Jobs, Bolden. demons and Dilhoefer; Kinney. Naylor, Pear son, Perkins and Styles. Greb Wins From Robson. DAYTON, O., March 18. Harry Greb of Pittsburg won the referee's de Stanley Willis and Steve Dalton j cislon over Tommy Robson of Boston uoia idol mgui in a iruunu puuu FJin .HUSKIES LEAVE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE TEAM TO VISIT PULLMAX. FULTON" IS TO START WEST Husky Fred to Meet "Battling" Hector in Bremerton Bout. SEATTLE. Wash.. March 18. Fred Fulton, Minnesota heavyweight, will meet "Battling" Hector of Bremerton, Wash., in the main event of a box ing smoker here March 26, it was an nounced today. Fulton, it was said, is due to leave New York for Seattle tomorrow. DePalma Ties Murphy Record. LOS ANGELES, Cal.. March 18. Ralph De Palma, in a tryout for the automobile races to be held Sunday, late today circled the mile and a quar ter track in 39 1-5 seconds, or at a speed of 115 miles an hour. This tied the record of Jimmy Murphy in ear lier tryouts. LIONS BEAT HOLY XAME TEAM Score 11 to 6 in Junior Game, on "V Floor; Rice, McLean Star.' The Y. M. C. A. Lions defeated the Holy Name Junior basketball team on the "Y" court yesterday by a score of 11 to 6. Harold Rice and Steve Mc Lean starred for the Lions, while Eil ers played in the limelight for- the losers. The lineup: Lions (11) Holy Name Ml) McLean 6 J7' D 1 Fontaln Wood 2 F 1 Albers Drew 1 C a Ellers Rice 2 O 2 Sislc D. Drew G Sharkey Lockwood S WILLAMETTE HOLDS ELECTION Paul Brown, Amity, Leads Basket ball; Robbin Fisher Track Head. WILLAMETTE UNIVERSITY, Sa lem, Or., March 18. (Special.) At a meeting of letter men in baseball and track captains were elected yester day for both branches of athletics to serve during the 1920 season. Paul Oregon Wrestlers to Meet Cougar Mat Artists With Dope in Beaver Favor. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL l.k.uiu, corvallis. Or., March 18. (Special.) The Oregon Aggie wres tling team will leave Corvallis for Pullman tomorrow afternoon, where they will meet the Cougar mat artists in the Bohler . gymnasium Saturday night. The Beavers have split even in the two meets they have had this season, dropping the first to the alumni by a score "of 10 to 2. and winning the second from University or Washington, 8 to 3. The men who will accompany Coach Arbuthnot to the northern institu tion ane Palmer at 125 pounds. Glos sop In the 135 class, Hongell at 145, Armstrong at 158 and McClain in the 175 weight Rackleff, who repre sented the Aggies at 145 in the Uni versity of Washing-ton meet, is out on account of a badly sprained ankle, and wilfcnot be able to make the trip. The dope slightly favors the Beav ers, out tne ract that U. of W. won from Washington State college last Saturday only by close decisions in every match but one prevents any belief that an easy match is coming up. The Aggie men are all in good shape, with the-exception of slight sprains. An effort is being made to schedule a meet with the University of Idaho while the O. A. C. team is up north. If this meet is held it will probably be on Monday night. Spring vaca tion at Corvallis will permit the men to be away from school work long enough to make this meet possible. ACORN'S TO MEET SWASTIKAS "Y" Teams to Clash Saturday .Night; Rapid Game in Prospect. A speedy game is looked for next Will Participate in Second Ten-Round Turmoil. Saturday night at 8 o'clock on the Y. M. C. A. floor when the Acorns and Swastikas, both 'Y" club teams, clash. The Swastika five is the only team thaf has been able to defeat the Acorns so far this season and the Acortis are out to even things up be fore they leave for an invasion of Puget sound basketball circles. On their trip north the Acorns will play the Winiock Athletic club five, the Moran Military school quintet and the Young Men's Division team of the Seattle Y. M. C. A, The latter has defeated all of the Puget sound city high school teams. A preliminary game will be played Saturday night between the Orioles and Newberg. This contest will start at 7:30 o'clock. ' Trout Spawn Allotted. WALLACE, Idaho, March 18. (Spe cial.) The state fish and game de partment has allotted to Shoshone county 1,000,000 trout spawn to be planted in ' the small streams and lakes of the county this spring. Many of the streams of the county have no outlets, owing to the fact that they empty into larger streams which are .polluted by lead water from mines and mills. These Smaller streams will be stocked with brook trout Hockey Team on' Way East. OTTAWA, Ont., March 18. Seattle's hockey team, which won the cham pionship of the Pacific coast, will ar rive here Sunday for the world title series against Ottawa, the eastern championship club. The first game will be played here Monday. The Se attle team is coming by way of Mil waukee and Chicago. BY RICHARD R. SHARP. Secretary Walter. B. Honeyman of the Portland Boxing commission ex pects to have his complete card for next Friday night at the Armory lined, up by this afternoon. He has already clinched four of .the bouts on the bill and has only the seml-wlndUD to sign. Freddie Ander son ' of Vancouver will meet Eddie Shannon of San Francisco in the main event of ten rounds, the match to be billed for the lightweight champion ship of the Pacific coast. Shannon is one of the best light weights ever developed west of the Rockies and has fought among many good boys, Benny t,eonara, iigui weight champion of the world: John ny Dundee andJohnny Kilbane. since Invading tne nortnwesi sti eral months ago Shannon has won decisions over Harry Shuman, Earl Balrd. "Puggv" Morton and fought a six-round draw with Charley Whito in Seattle. Anderson's showing against Joe Benjamin impressed the commission and the fans that he would be a good man to test Shannon with and should make a worthy opponent for the clev er San Francisco lightweight. Honeyman had been figuring on using Allie Nack. well known New York 138 pounder, in the 10-round semi-windup against "Puggy" Mor ton,, but could not come to terms with the latter. Frankie Jones, or some other good battler, will bef pitted against Nack in Morton's place. Stanley Willis of Philadelphia and Steve Dalton, aggressive San Fran Cisco welterweight, will tangle in an other 10-round scrap. The two short- distance bouts will find Niel Zimmer man meeting Irving Gleason of Se attle and Earl Zimmelman versus Jimmy Cole of Seattle. The first match is scheduled to go six rounds, while the curtain-raiser Is set for four cantos. m Joe Gorman will meet Young Brown in the main event of tonight's card of fights at Dreamland rink, San Fran Cisco. In meeting Brown, Gorman will be tackling the toughest propo sition he has yet attempted since his return to California, i Billy Mascott will meet Gene Ples tena. while Alex Trambita9 is down to meet Buck Holley. Fred Fulton left Philadelphia yes terday for Portland to finish training for his 10-round battle at the Mil waukle arena March 31. Fulton's opponent has not yet been named. It was originally planned to stack Big Fred against the winner of the Meehan-Walker match, but no provision was made for a draw. Matchmaker Frank Kendall is up in the air, for the man may not use either Meehan or Walker. This Hugh Walker from Kansas City is a very likely looking heavy weight, and the best bet yet to appear In a local ring from the east. He showed that he could hit, take them and step around at a fast clip for a big man. He went better .Wednesday night against Meehan in the ring than he had been boxing in the gym nasium and will always be welcomed here: There are a lot of. heavy weights parading around as real "fighters" who would last quick un der Walker's steady, persistent at tack. Against anyone excepting Willie Meehan and the bout might have been another story. JEFF-HILL GAME UGH SPECTATORS MIX FREELY IN NUMEROUS DISPUTES. I '. Benson Squad Is Cynosure of All Eyes as It Plays in Final Two Deciding Contests. Intertcholastic Leacue Standings. W. U. Pct.l W. L. Pet. Washington 6 1 .837IJefferson. .. 4 4 .500 Franklin... 6 1 .8.17. Hill 2 8 .2.10 Benson.... o 1 . S3.I, Commerce. . 1 7 .l.t'J Lincoln 6 2 .7.10 James John 0 8 .000 Columbia... 4 4 .OUOi Coach Qulgley's Jefferson high school basketball team finished its season yesterday with a victory over the Hill Military academy five in a game featured by rough playing and disputes, in which the spectators mixed in freely. The contest was played on the Y. M. C. A. court and the final score was 17 to 13. The blue and gold quintet had things pretty much its own way in the first period. The Jefferson play ers made most of their points in the first session, getting a total of 13, while they held the cadets to two field baskets, but they slowed up con siderably in the second period, with the result that the cadets piled up nine points while the democrats were getting four. Harold Robinson, cadet forward, led his teammates in scoring with two field baskets and three converted free throws. Mike Godell of Jeffer son worked the floor well and was high man for the democrats with six points. Steele and Watson also showed to good advantage for the blue and gold five. Youmans injured his ankle and was re moved at the start of the second pe riod. The lineup: , Jefferson U7) . .F. . . F. ..C. . .G. ..G. S. Steele (2). Goodell ).... BroURhton Youmans (3).. Watson (4).... Mlnmaugh (2). Stanton ..S Referee H. T. Smith, Hill (7) (13i . . Hull Koblnson Goodrich (2) Day .(2) ff. Hayuen A. HaYon Koss Two more games remain to be played in the interscholastic league before the schedule is completed, and the Benson Tech school five will fig ure prominently in both of them, This afternoon the Tech school quin tet meets the Washington high five on the Y. M. C. A. floor at 3 o'clock. Whether or not the championship of the league will go to one school or result in a tie between two or three of the institutions depends largely on the outcome of the game today. A defeat for either team this afternoon will put it out of the running, while a victory for the Washington tossers will put them in the lead for the title. Should .Benson get over the Colonials this afternoon it will be tied with Franklin for the leadership of the league, and the final game of the season between the Quakers and Met chanics, which is scheduled for next week, will decide the title. Georgie Brandon, the ever-battling Portland featherweight, is anx ious to get started again .and cannot see why the matchmakers will not use him, taking into consideration the many great fighits he put up "here. ' Frankie Jones left for San Fran Cisco Wednesday night. His wife was recently operated on for appendicitis and has been recuperating In Fres no. Owing to the serious illness of his wife Jones did not have any time to train at all in the south and the few days' work he had here did not tend to put him in any kind of shape Fans who saw him knock Jimmy .Darcy all over the ring at the Ice E. 4 9 DAY DODGER 'ROOKS' VICTORS Reed Dormitory Recruits Defeated, 22 to 11, in Final Game. "Rook" met "rook" in basketBall at Reed college yesterday morning and as a result the Daydodger recruits de feated the dormitory team 22 to 10. The game showed plenty of rivalry but little else in the nature of team work and fast play. .-. Lewis Jones, with 6 points of the losers' 10, played a good game. Ryan and Weinstein led for the winners. The game marked the. end of basket ball for the season at Heed. 'ENORMOUS TALLIES ARE MADE Tiger Teams Pile Up Huge Scores in Practice Game. LOS ANGELES. Cal., March 18. (Special.) A nine-inning game be tween Stubby Edington'e Home Brews and Hughie High s Kerry Patch Vio lets comprises this afternoon practice of the Vernon Tigers at Washington park. No score was kept. There wasn't a Burroughs handy. A rapid fire session with Essick lecturing the rooks took up the morning period. Skipper Essick expects J. Carlisle HORSEHIDE DOPE KINKS, BRUISES, GROUCHES, CHARLIE HORSES, EXCESS WEIGHT AND THE LIKE. 1 1 - T. : 3 1 I UGH I r cVion THtRE. ) - f HO SIR-C Two views of C UrvYijiwc1 noBf.cn - . BUflj Azmk. Uo-EASYTtULRt p They- Fjo BUNGALOWS RUN" HORSES OUT New York Track.9 Made' Into Cot tage Colony. NEW YORK. March 18. The old Gravcsend race track near Coney Island, over which for many years the Brooklyn handicap, a turf classic, was run, was today sold to a real es tate firm for 675,000. The entire tract of land, consisting of about 90 acres, was the property of the' Brook Iyn Jockey club, in which Philip and Michael Dwyer, brothers, were the principal stockholders. It will be cut up into building lots. This Is the -last of the three Brook lyn race tracks which were closed when the Fercey-Gray law was re pealed. The' Sheepsheard Bay track, used until a few months ago as an automobile speedway. Is now being dismantled and converted into a res idential trait. The Brighton Beach course already has been transformed into a bungalow colony. . WRESTLERS GO TO SEATTLE Multnomah P. N'. A. Champions Expected to Emerge Winners. Four wrestlers of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club left last night for Seattle, where they will compete in the Pacific Northwest association wrestling championships, which will be held in the sound city today and tomorrow. , The winners in this meet will be "sent to the national champion ships, which will be held at Birming ham, Ala., next month. The local grapplers are expected to come out on top in the meet at Seat tle, as three members of the team are veterans at the mat game and are already holders of P. N. A. titles. George Clarke will not make the trip EX-SERVICE MEN HEAR THE CALL OF THE OLD LIFE Former Soldiers and Sailors Find Civil Life Too Tame. They Arc Joining the Marine Corps. Combines the Desirable Features of Both Army and Navy. If trouble starts over the border. If a Haitian reb wants a scrap. Should, any one start a dhrorder Where Uncle Sam's bossing the map If bad little bandits or pirates Insist upon pulling big scenes Don't worry or fret or get in a sweat, lust call up and tell the Ma rines. Just tell the Marines, just tell the Marines, They'll get on the job in their crapping jeans; ' Ask 'em for trouble, and trouble you gets. For they've got sharp points on their bayonets. They land on their feet and they're got nine lives, And they pack a punch In their forty-fives. "Two battalions of Marines for immediate service In Haiti." Not long ago that call went out from the U. S. Marine Recruiting Bureau. Within ten days those two battalions were recruited, equipped and ready to shove off. And every man In those outfits was a former soldier, sailor or Marine. They found civil life too tame. The "service" was In their blood, and they could not get it out. Strange? Not a bit of It. Ask any one of "Jack" Pershing's gang. Ask any ex-man-o' -war's man. Oh, yes, we all growled at for the Marine Corps were pro moted from the ranks. These offi cers, by their efUclenry ami valor, have so amply demonstrated the wisdom of developing the officer material among the enlisted men, that the system has been adopted as a permanent feature of the service. Any man who has the makings of an officer In him stands an excellent chance of ris ing rapidly through the non-com-missloned grades of corporal and sergeant and "graduating" Into a second lieutenant. After that he has the snme opportunity of at taining still higher rank as any graduate of the Naval Academy. In addition, some Marines re selected each year to take the four-year course at Annapolis, upon completion of which they are immediately commissioned second lieutenants of Marines or ensigns in the Navy. When we remember that ther Is one non-commlBsioned officer to every seven men no one who is of average ability and applies himself can expect to remain a. private for very long. The Marine at Work and Play Many people have the Idea that the service Is a life of hard work. long hours and h.irrh discipline. Nothing? was ever further from the truth. There is work to be done in the Marine Corps. But It is good. 1 MX -Tsr i ,,H4ril w rl&r- t-Af, r--H ::0 Bringing in Haitian Kail Men reveille and swore to murder the bugler. We all "groused" at the chow and whetted our bayonets for the cooks. Oh, yes, full packs rubbed the skin oft our shoulders. But Remember those days when we were fit as fiddles, could eat the hind leg off a table and enjoy It, could lick our weight in wildcats, and weren't afraid to say so? And remember the buddies who bunked with us, hiked with us. scrapped with us, took all our money, bum med our tobacco, called us bad names and would give us the shirts off their backs if we asked em? Somehow civil life doesn't often give us friends like that. The man who has never done a hitch in the service has missed a lot Isn't that so? And for any man who is looklnr; for service all sorts, kinds, con ditions and varieties of service the Marine Corns is the one best bet. The Marine is "soldier and sailor, too." When the big ships go to sea the Marines go with them. Be fore the Marine has a chance to pet tired of sea-going he Is landed at Haiti or Honolulu. China or the Philippines Opportunity for travel and ad venture Is only one of the things that the Marine Corps afford In this branch of the Bervice a man finds unusual facilities for physical nnd mentAl development. The Ma rine Corps makes an ordinary mail Into a real "husky." And there are all manner of trades that may be learned in the corps. Every day ex-Marines are, immediately upon discharge, step ping Into well-paid civilian Jobs that range from that of aviator to that of cook. And, as every one knows, an honorable discharge from the Marine Corps is the best letter of recommendation any one can have. It is. In fact, a United States Government certificate which stamps the possessor as "In spected and passed as an honest, loyal and capable man, who has learned to use his head and his bands and use them to the best advantage." During the war with Germany all theg idditional officers ned! healthful, outdoor work. There are short, snappy drills that make a man alert and "on the Job" lit mind and body. There are sritlne up exercises that take inches off a man's waistline and put them on his chest. There's shooting en the rifle range every Marine is trained to be a crack shot; there's work with wireless telcgrntihy and something of seamanship. It's work, hut It's tho sort of work men like. There must be discipline, Jii"t as there niuxt be l.iws in a com munity or rules In n oftlce or factory. Hut the Marine discipline Is ofa sort that no reasonable man Vould object to. Life Is not nil work for the Ma rine. There are baseball, football, boxing nnd swimming fnr the ile voices of these sports. No powt is without lis pool tables. There Is fishing nnd hunting. Tor Ma rines, In their travels, jrn where grime, big and" llttlo. Is plentiful nnd rrnme laws are few. Men not on gunrd mny. as a rule, leave their station after 2 or 3 o'clock In the ofternoon nnd mav remain sway until reveille, or T o'clock) the following morning. Whenever a man may bo con veniently spnred, his commanding officer has authority to grant him a ten-day furlmirh, plus the time required to travel to and return from his home town. The Marine Corps desire to a-lve young mri from all parts of tfce country an opportunity of cnllat Inir In the serine for two, thre or fonr years. The loml reemlf Inir ntnr lias some arnncles la tin tnofa for eaperlally good men. It nay be that yna are the sort ot man they are looking; for, lloa't hesitate to rail and talk thin; over. It will put yon ander no obligation. Yon will not be arsed to enllnt. lint yon AV learn tho truth about the Marine Crpa from men who know the life and like It well enough to slay In. Sent for booklet. U. S. Marine Corps Recruiting Office ,'KMI I'anama llldu.. Third and Aider Mrrrla I'ortland, Oreaon to Seattle, as he inpured his knee re cently. Olmar Drauga, chairman of boxing and wrestling at the Winged M institution, and Instructor Kddle O'Connell will accompany the men 011 the trip north. Virgil Hamlin, (ieorge Hanson, Cxrl Feijnger and Karl Gar rison made the trip. - 1 AL'STKALIAX MAXAGKIl COMIXO "Snowy" Haker Would -Tukc American Fighters to Ilanl. HONOLULU, T. H.. March 18 (Special.) R. L. "Snowy" Haker. fa mous Aiistralisn fiphl promoter mid The Patriot The Gordon hat covers a multitude of hims - If you're not one of them, get yours today. THE GORDON HAT head of the Mlurlium in Sydney, in coining to t he I'nitt-d Si;iten thin spring, neconllntf to word rriM'lvod here from Sydney. Hin purpo is to arrange for a viit of a number of American boxers this (all to Aujh tr1i. Ohe Shirt With Comfort Points Correctly cut yoke gives that tailored effect across the shoulders. Tsr't dint tt 1 PI I ecru trommel roruns A ItfAL COMBINATION Of STVlf. ANJ COtTCRX SOLE AGENTS FOR GORDON HATS MATTERS Those Big Ones! will be ready to tackle anything after their winter vacation. Better get your tackle in shape while our assortment is still complete. Backus&Worria 273 MORRISON, NEAR FOURTH 286 WashingtoillStreet hoot tne reaneaa into tne vuos" ' 4 games just as soon as he shakes his sv 4 '7: --''ff-'-ll ! ""''V-' ' L '--