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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1922)
13 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1922 -4 CAMPBELL IS BACK ON DREGOm ELEVEPi 210-Pdunder Is Expected to Play at Tackle. - BACK FIELD IMPROVES Otllison and Tiny Shields Also Show TTp Better Work as Forwards. UNIVERSITY OP OREGON, Eu gene, Oct. 5. (SpeniaUf With the return of Cogs Campbell,' whose coming has been patiently awaited by varsity supporters, and the steady improvement in the condi tion of Callison and Tiny Shields, the future strength of the Oregon forward line is- assured. , Campbell, 210 Dounds of football energy, re ported in a suit last night and cele brated his return by participating in the hour scrimmage through which Coach Huntington put his proteges. Campbell looks fit and had no difficulty in handling the regular line opposed to him. His return plugs the hole at tackle left by the graduation of Spike Leslie, which McKowns inexperience has made it hard for him to fill. Protest Is Fosaible. There Is a rumor that Oregon Agricultural college will protest Campbell as ineligible, but it is hard to see where the protest would ap ply. Campbell has had much football experience, as he played four years of interscholastic ball with Eugene high school and also with both the Oregon freshmen and the O. A. C rooks. ' On the defense Campbell is won derfully effective, his great strength and uncanny ability with his hands making it hard for an opposing for ward or back to get through him. On offense he relies too much on his strength and his hands, rather than the tremendous charging force his 200 pounds gives him, but coach ing will remedy that. The first string backs are fast de veloping the punch and drive that they lacked earlier in the season. Last night they punched the second line for heavy and consistent gains. Len Jordan, who' missed his letter by seconds last fall, is going great. Jordan is heavier and faster and his knee is giving him no trouble. Itnrks Are Good. With Jordan, Latham, Gram. Chapman, King and Johnson, Hunt ington has six backs between whom there is little to. choose. With La tham and Gram punting well. Chap man and Latham passing in good form and Chapman getting his place kicks over with speed and preci sion, all departments play are taken care of. Russ Brown, from Knox college, III., where he played fullback, Ja railing signals on the second string. Though Brown is a comer he has no chance "of displacing Chapman at quarter, but will be used as alter nate quarter, going in to relieve Chapman. Brown showed up well last night in scrimmage and hit the line hard, his main trouble being in his passing. Burton Good Prospect. Another likely looking back is Ken Burton, who played for the freshmen two years ago. Burton -is a smashing player, and while he has a tendency to get hurt easily, he is a consistent ground gainer and hard to tackle. Burton also is a clever kicker. Then there is Jens Tergenson, who starred on the yearling squad last year. Tergenson is consistent, an extraordinarily accurate tackier and though fairly light, hits hard. Little is known here of the strength of Willamette with whom the varsity plays Saturday. Last year Willamette held Oregon to a 7 to 3 score. Much the same lineup that started against Pacific will go against Willamette, with Dick Reed at cen ter. Campbell may see action at tackle, though it is doubtful if he plays much of the game. STANFORD STADIUM BLAMED FOR CONFERENCE SQUABBLE School, Behind in Building Programme, Visualizes Great Results From Profits of Athletic Contests in New BowL ADAIR MORE THAN MEETS MATCH IX BOBBY. BYL H. GREGORY. IT SEEMS inevitable that an or ganization trying to cover as much territory as the Pacific coast intercollegiate conference should be torn ever so often by mis understanding. Mainly these flare ups are due to different points of view resulting from widely different geographic location. You can't ex pect the California universities to think along the same lines all the time as those in the north, and vice versa. But latterly another "factor has complicated the conference problem. That is the building of stadiums by the richer institutions. Washington has a etadium. Stanford has a stadium.- California is building, or about to build, a stadium. These stadiums represent heavy invest ments. To be profitable they must be used, not permitted to lie idle. We haven't a doubt that the new Stanford stadium is the real reason behind the latest conference dis pute which has resulted in charges against Stanford of having violated conference rules in scheduling a post-season football game, with the University of Pittsburg in the sta dium for December 30. It is to con sider these charges that a meeUng of conference representatives ill b& held in Portland tomorrow. Stanford has developed an en tirely new angle of profit from her stadium and has opened possibilities from its use '.thai ho other univer sity seems even to have dreamed of. The Stanford stadium in. the first place was comparatively an inex pensive project. Instead of being of concrete, it is an earthen bowl, the sides of the bowl being of banked earth. Almost the entire first cost was paid out in one foot ball game, the Stanford-California game of last year. With a new stadium completed and paid for the first year indeed, m the' first game played in it Stanford began to wonder what to do with the enormous future profits in , sight. Like all other ' growing universities, Stanford is behind in her building programme. Alumni have even been conducting a cam paign to raise the large sums needed for new buildings. It occurred to some alumni or faculty genius that the future profits from the stadium, which would be far and away greater than the athletic fund would need, might be applied to these new buildings. It was a great idea. Of course it took. The faculty, naturally, were delighted, proving- that faculty members are human. It appealed also to alumni and students. It sounded good to the athletes, who saw themselves with every scrim mage laying a few "tricks for the alma mater. So at Stanford in quite a natural way there has developed a situa tion without precedent in intercol legiate athletics. You might call it "chaperoned commercialism for phil- antnropic purposes. The Stanford faculty, suddenlv having discovered an inexhaustible gold mine, has reversed overnight me traditional raculty attitude of mere toleration of varsity athletics, to one of enthusiastic approval and co-operation. With every football game in the stadium meaning dol- ars tor the bunding programme and contributing to the growth of a greater and better university, the faculty members see what a good thing providence, disguised in the stadium and football team, has vouchsafed them. From that it follows, of course, that the oftener the stadium is used and the bigger the games scheduled, the larger will, be the profits ac cruing and the more money avail able for the building programme. Even a faculty man can see that the answer is to use the stadium just as often as possible and to pro cure'the best attractions. So in all likelihood it will de velop that it is not just the athletic council at Stanford which has ar ranged this game with Pittsburg for December 30 in disregard of con ference rules. The faculty itself is behind the game. And that being the case, our bet is that, required either to cancel the game of drop out of the conier ence, Stanford will drop out of the conference and do it with the full approval of the faculty. Just one thing could prevent, and the conference would have to be unanimous to put it across. That would be for. all conference repre sentatives at their meeting here to morrow, or at a later meeting if the trouble isn't settled then, to make a hard and fast agreement?. to break off all athletic relations with Stanford and to refuse to play any games with Stanford teams un less the Pittsburg game is canceled and conference rules observed. Can it be done? It's doubtful. Can you imagine that California would go to the extent of breaking off athletic relations with Stanford, including the California-Stanford "big game," merely for the sake of enforcing regulations of a con ference with which California her self is not at all times in too close sympathy? Remember, also, that by another season California will have a sta dium of her own. It will not be free of debt as the Stanford stadium is, but that will offer an additional reason for keeping it busy so as to pay off the indebtedness. It's doubtful, very doubtful, if California would go so far as to consent to a break in relations with Stanford if the latter stands pat. When you come down to it, more arid more the signs point to a segregation of the coast conference into a northern conference and a California conference as the only possible permanent solution of the difficulties that so continually beset the unwieldy organizfLtion. An ideal conference in the north would be composed of Washington, Oregon, Washington State, Oregon Agricultural college and Idaho. The south is not so well off with only three institutions of conference class in California, Stanford and Southern California. However, Ne vada, St. Mary's or some smaller university could be taken in to fill it out.- Then the California colleges could do as they please, as- they no doubt will do in any event. Their stadiums could be kept busy on their own terms. The northern colleges would lose nothing, for the California col leges would have to have outside games, and inter-conference strug gles could easily be arranged. In fact, there is no logical reason why Oregon, or Washington, or any of the others, should not arrange games with the California institu tions as they please, except that the schedule o their own conference should have first call. FREE-FOR-ALLS RtTX IX MUD Finishes Close in Races at Klicki tat County Fair. GOLDKNDALE, Wash.. Oct. 5. (Special.) The track was heavy aiter two (. -ys or rain, but all free for-all races were run with close fin ishes at the Klickitat county fair today. Jesse (Jeorge won the first day or the Indian relay race bv su perior riding and handling of his string. Chief George Mennenick's string v-ith Johnson Spedis riding was a close second. Candidates for the Klickitat dert race tomorrow are: Valley Park Maid, Skyman. Jellison, Olds Eight. Hugo K. Asher. Chrome, Bernice E Helman, Minstrel. Irish Maid, Con ch if ero and Bowman II. The first seven are stake winning horses on canaman ana northwest tracks dur ing the last summer. Race results today; Pmir and a half furlongs, Indian "Won by Edwin. Shortcut second. Crosscut mira, i ime. nj seconds. Half mile dash, fre-e-for-all Won bv Brclasksj, Little One second. Pebble Fountain third. Time, 53 seconds. Half mile dash, Indian Won bv "Bob Joiner, fourtttcut second, All Alone third. Time. seconas. Five-eighths mile dash, fr-ee-fnr-j.il. Von by Chrome. JelUson second. Hugo K. Asher third Time. tH seconds. Four and a half furlongrs, Indian Won by Lady Major. Jay Buzzing second, Durk Fenny third. Time, 64 seconds. One mile run. free-for-all Von bv Valley Park Maid, Skyman second, Hei maii third. Time, 1 :5l. 11 Firs: day of relay race. Indian Jesse Georse string: first. George .Mennenick string second. Whe-ier Miller string third. V IXLMAX CANCELS GAME College Team Iceitles Xot to Play All-Stars. WASHINGTON STATE COLLEGE, Pullman. Oct. 5. (Special.) The all-star college team football game scheduled for Saturday afternoon has been called off by Coach Welch. The game was to h .ve been played between ex-Washington State stars and the first string team. In its place will be held scrimmages be tween the first and. second teams, and between the freshman and the third varsity line-up. Coach Welch feels he can do more in rounding his men into shape by scrimmage under supervision than by the. all-star game. Games to Be Broadcast. OR KG OX AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE. Corvallis, Oct. 5. (Special.) News of the football games at O. A. C. will be broadcast up and down the coast from the college radio station in the physics depart ment, it was announced by Jacob Jordan, instructor in physics. , DUSK VISIBLE TO NO ONE SAVE UMP, AVERS EDGREN If Stands Had Been of Wood Instead of Steel Enraged Fans Would Have Torn Them Down, Says Writer. BY ROBERT KDGREN. POLO GROUNDS. New York, Oct. 5. (Special.) Today's clash be tween the Giants and Yanks came near ending- in a riot when Umpire Hildebrand called the game "on account of darkness" at the end of the tenth inning: with the score standing' 3-3. If the big- stadium had been wood ins-tead of steel the enraged crowd would have torn it down. As it was. the spectators refused to move long- after the play ers had left the field. The rails of the upper grands-tand were crowded with fans yelling and jeering; at the officials as they walked off under police ' protection and making; un complimentary remarks about the club owners and ali other persons who may profit through playing; the g-ame ag'ain for another grate. The regular tickets for the Giants' g-ame will be accepted tomorrow, but throwing; out today's game makes one more that the public will have to pay for before the series is over. The decision of the umpires was a startling surprise to the crowd. There was no sign of approaching darkness visible to the non-professional' eye. In fact it was practic ally as lig-ht as at any time during the afternoon, and was light enough to play ball for half an hour afterward. Disappointment la Increased. The disappointment of the crowd was increased by a feeling that the thrill of the day was about due and that the Yanks, after a magnificent uphill fight from-the firtt inning on, were about to win. There was every indication that Barnes, pitching for the Giants, was near the end of his strength, and that Shawkey, for the Yanks, was going- better as the game went on. It was such a ball game as is sel dom seen in any world's series. In the first inning, with Groh and Frisch on second and first, Irish Meusel smashed a tremendous hit into the left field bleachers for a home run. scoring the other two players. Dugan scored a run in the Yanks' half of the inning. From then on it was a stem chase and a long chase. The Giants never scored another run, but the Yanks scored one in trie fourth and one in the eighth. Packed Stands Swelter.' It was like a July afternoon and the packed stands were . sweltering in the humid heat. After the en thusiasm of the crowd over the Giants' fine work in the first inning had simmered down, the rooting was 50-50 for awhile. Then it began to turn ( in favor of the Yanks. Barnes aroused the fans' antagonism by handling Babe Ruth with extreme care, floating high bals up around Babe's ears and passing him . out without giving him a chance to whack the pill. The crowd wanted to see Ruth knock out a home run and didn't care whether it was base ball diplomacy to give him a chance or not. It began hissing and hoot ing at Barnes, carrying the jeering and catcalls over even when he had left the box and came up to bat. In the ninth McGraw sent in Smith, the walloper, to bat for Cun ingham. Smith cracked the first ball pitched down along the first base line and it struck the grand stand wall with a bang, foul by a foot. Induced to return and try again, he struck out. The roar of rival rooters in the stands then was deafening. For the first time in the series it began , to sound aa if a baseball championship was being played. The Yanks came up to win in the last inning., and for a mo ment their chances looked good, when Scott singled to center and Witt singled to left field, but Barnes tightened and made Dugan reach for a couple of wide curve that he couldn't have hit with a telegraph pole. The -Giants were quickly disposed of in the tenth after Bancroft had stretched a fine center field hit to a close two bagger. Babe Ruth, exasperated because Barnes floated a couple over his head, reached for a third wide one and struck out. The Yanks failed to score, and then came the dusk that was invisible to all but the umpire, and the game was over. (Copyright, 1921, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Tiny Herman Whales Daylights Oat of Willie Keeler Daring Six-Round Foot Race. . t. Bobby Harper is still the cham pion infighter of the nortliwest. In 10 rounds of infighting at the ar mory Wednesday night. Harper took the decision from Barney Adair of New York. At that the Gotham Harp showed Seattle Robert a few tricks of the ring, some of them perfectly legiti mate but others, in particular the pivot punch, which lias been barred everywhere since La Blanche knocked out the original Jack Dempsey with it many years ago, is decidedly out of tune with mrfd ern boxing rules. Adair used this punch twice on Harper and despife loud squawks by Bobby's manager, Charley Jost, got away with it. Referee Gruman didn't caution Adair. Probably Gru man had never heard of the pivot punch he didn't act as if he had. Adair showed little but an inclina tion to keep close to Harper with his head buried on one of Bobby's shoulders. In this manner he avoided many of Harper's upper cuts. The usual ninth inning rally was put on by tne two main event ers. It was in the tenth and last round that Harper made his best showing of the fight. Neither boxer showed anything resembling a knockout punch and the damage on both sides' was light Harper weighed 144ft pounds and Adair 147. Tiny Herman whaled the day lights out of Willie Keeler, a heavy weight from Denver, and took the six-round decision in a walk. Keeler was iu the ring to stay the six rounds and must have traveled at least 10 miles keeping out of the huge Astorian's way. Tiny shot plenty of left hooks into Keeler, but couldn't corner the Denver frost long enough to slam over his right. Later in the dressing room Her man continued the squabble and knocked Keeler over with a punch. Eddie Richards added another knockout to his record when he stopped Jack Davis in two rounds. Richards busted Davis on the chin in the first and Davis piled up in a heap on the canvas. Just before the bell rang Davis went down again under a left to the stomach and a right to the face, but the bell saved him and .his seconds dragged him to his corner. He was sent to the slaughter again, but after two m'ore knockdowns In the second round Referee Gruman stopped it. By far the best. fight on the card for action was the second four rounder, in which Neal Zimmerman took the decision from Ah Fong. Fong, in the first, caught Zimmer man with a hard right to the face and the battle was on. Zimmerman piled up his points by jarring the oriental with a long left to the face. Jack Stanley won on a foul in two rounds over Johnny Wade in the curtain raiser. eight teams in the lineup. A post season ser.es of games between the winner and the best teams in Seat tle. Tacoma and Spokane is also being talked of. ACTION HELD ROBBERY (Continued from Pag-a 34.) P AT BANKER BASKETBAXL OFFI CIALS TO MEET. Plans and Schedules for Winter to Be Drawn T."p at Session This Afternoon. - With baseball singing its swan song, basketball devotees are al ready beginning to get their suction-soled shoes out of hock to pre pare for the coming cage season. The first league to take up this season's organization is the Bank ers' league. This circuit has been one of the fastest in the city for several years. Some of the best hoopers are employes of local banking institutions. Several bank quintets have displayed enough stuff in past seasons to cope with the best of the1 club and independent teams. Banker basketball league offi cials will meet today at 5:15 o'clock at the office of T. H. Gawley, phys ical director of the Y. M. C. A., to draw up plans and schedule for the 1922-1923 stretch. The league offi cials have invited all Portland banks to enter teams. Institutions already entered are United States National, First Nat'onal, Northwestern Na tional, Hibernia Savings Ladd & Tilton and Federal Reserve banks. Basketball has been steadily built up here until it has reached a point where it is major sport in season. Few games are faster than a good basketball game and evenly matched teams draw record gates. Plans are now on foot for an all star independent league something on the order of the former inter city b? spball league, w Ith six or made another miraculous catch. He raced far into onter, catching Scott's fly. wtUe stasrsering and falling. Scott has grounds for swearing out warrants charging Frisch with highway robbery. Frisch, determined to play the entire game himself, bunted a pop fly toward first in the fifth and beat it out by sheer speed, then stole second and raced to third on a wild pitch, only to be left. Ilotk Fails Again. Two wer. out inthe Yanks' half when Dugan singled and gave Ruth still another chance. He hit fairly hard, but the omnipresent Frisch clamped onto his bounder and ended it. Young started the sixth with an undeserved hit. Scott fumbled the ball, recovered and Young was called safe in a close de cision at first, the official scorers giving it a hit. He was forced on Kelley s bounder to Shawkey. who fumbled Just long enough to lose the easy double play. It cost noth ing, however, as the next two fifed to Ruth, both aiming at the right field stand. Pipp had a base on balls earned to start the sixth, but Hildebrand mis called the fourth and Pipp finally fouled out. Meusel drew a pass and went to second while Frisch threw out Schang and was left when Hilde brand called Ward oift on strikes. Barnes Changes Style. There was nothing doing in the seventh except battling with Hilde brand. Barnes switched pitching style twice and struck out two Yankees, who took them without trying, which made their argument that Hildebrand would call them anyhow. The Giants got nothing in their eighth. Dugan, after being three times on bases, bunted and was out easily. After that Ruth, who had looked like a sucker against Barnes, deliberately placed a two bagger into left field, stepping around to punch out the hit. He made Emil Meusel, who was over in center field look bad. Pipp drove the ball clear to the center field stands, but Cunningham was play ing out there and caught it. Ruth stole home with a sheer dash, but as he was coming to the plate Meusel smashed away and hit a foul to right and Babe was prevented from being restored to his throne. Then with the count worked down to 3 and 2, Bob 'Meusel slashed a vicious drive over second and by a des perate sprint turned it into a two bagger. . Schang slashed hard at Kelley, who fumbled, recovered and stopped the rally. (plants Rush Reserves. The Giants rushed up reserves In the ninth. Smith came within a fraction of an inch of a hit, but his slash past first went foul and he struck out. The Yank strategy went awry in their ninth. After Scott made his first hit of the series. Shawkey was ordered to sacrifice and forced Scott at second. Had he laid down that bunt right, the Yanks would have grabbed the victory there, for Witt cracked a nice single to left and then Dugan struck out. Nothing seemed to break for the Yanks. Bancroft rapped a hit to center in the tenth, but was cut down at sec ond by Witt's perfect throw. Scott blocking him from second and tag ging him wonderfully, making up for some of his erratic work. The Yanks looked pitifully weak and with an hour more of daylight re maining the umpires called play while the crowd roared. SOCCER TEAM WILD 3IEET Manager of Kerns Squad Wants to Bolster Up Aggregation. The Kerns united soccer football team will meet tonight in room E, Central library. Manager Bragg ex pects all members of his team to be present and has invited any others interested in soccer, not affiliated with any other club, to attend. The Kerns team was runnerup for the Portland soccer association title last season. Several of last year's veterans are missing this season, so Blagg wants to do some bolstering. CUBS DRUB WHITE SOX CHICAGO SERIES EVENED; SCORE 10 TO 3. Nationals Win First Contest of Kind Sinre 1905; Blanken shlp Driven Off Mound. CHICAGO. Oct. 5. The Chics go Nationals evened up the series for the city championship with their American league rivals today by winning, 10 to 3. It was the first game the Nationals had won sines 115, the junior organization hav ing won 13 straight games. Eddie Mulligan, hero of yester day's game, had an erratic day and the White Sox defense cracked after the clubs had battled on even terms, the American leaguers com ing from behin and tying the count. After Mulligan's slips the Cubs drove Ted Blankenshlp from the box in the seventh inning, after which Manager Gleason tried out a couple of his young pitchers. Os borne was hit hard only in two Innings and pitched great ball in the others. 0 Johnny Evers. former manager of the Chicago Nationals, who has been acting as assistant to Manager Gleason, replaced Mulligan at third base, was given a big hand by the crowd, but he had nothing to do. Zeb .Terry, a former member of the White Sox.-was the batting star of the Cub with four hits and a walk in five times up. Tomorrow will be an open date and the scene of hostilities will shift to the White Sox park Saturday. Total ettendanoe, 14,516. Total receipts, J15.012 30. Players' pool, $7656.27. Clubs share. $510418. Commissioners share, $2:51.85. The score: White Sox I Cubs BHOAl BHOA Hooper.r. 4 2 2 OStatx.m... ft 1 1 0 Johnson. . 3 1 1 S HiIloeher,s S 0 1 S Collins.;.. 4 2 3 Terry. 2 4 4 2 2 Shely.l. 4 15 O.Orimee.l.. 4 3 B 0 Mostil.m.. 2 0 7 0 Barher.r.. 12 11 Strunk.1.. 2 10 OIMiller.1. 4 12 0 Mulligan. 3 3 1 2 2 Krut.3 3 0 12 Kalk- tOO 0 O Farrell.c. 2 4 BvermS... O 0 0, 0 tbort,p. 4 10 2 Schalk,c 3 o 4 li Lever'te.p. 1 1 O 1( T.Bla'ip.p. 2 O 0 01 Davenp't.p 0 0 0 01 ".lack. p. . . w o yt ui Yarjant... 100 0 Totals. 80 9 24 10' Totals. 83 14 27 14 Batted for Mulligan In elgnin. t Batted for Mack in ninth. Chlc&RO Americana. 0O.1 1 1000 0 3 Chicago Nationals.. 20100043 10 Errors. Mulligan 2. Two-base hits, Sheely, Grimes. Home run. Collins. Stolen bas'-s. Hooper. Sheely. Sacrifices. Onhnrne. Krtik. Banter. O'Farrell. Dou ble plays. Hollocher to Krug; Mulligan to Collins to Sheely. Base on osr.s, um brrnj 6, Leveretts 1, T. Blankenshlp 2. Davenport 2. Struck out. Osborne 7, T. Blankenshlp 2. Mack 1. FLORSHEIM SHOE The faithful service rendered by Florsheim Shoes is more fully appreciated because of the continuous comfort enjoyed throughout their long life. The Florsheim Banker $10 Tlie Florsheim Shoe Store Co. 3o0 Washington Slwt, Near rrk Street FOR THE MAN WHO CARE 8 PETER THE BREWER WINS RECORD FOR RENEWAL OF TRANSYLVANIA EQUALED. Baseball Summary. How the Series Stand. At Portland 2 games; Salt T.ake no games; at Los Angeles 2 games. San Francisco 1 game; at Seattle 1 game, Sacramento 1 game; at Oakland 3 games, Vernon no games. Where the Teams Play Next Week. Salt Lake at Seattle; Sacramento at Partland; Oakland at San Francisco; Vernon at Los Anpeles. Beaver Batting' Average. B. H. Ave I B. H. Ave. Hale... 4XU.174 .3n7 Mlddlet'n 1118 24.222 Conolly. 3 1 .333;l.everenz 11 21.2IK High... 61 1f2 .31tiFuhrman lsn 3 .200 Brazill.. 435 13.-. .31 01 Wa 1 berg. 72 14 .104 Gressett f)15 ISO .3 1 0 Paton . . . lot 1U.1S2 Poole... 715 213 2!HCrumpler 71 12.HK Cox 54 1H4 .ZftH'Mttze IS i.l McCann. 541 ISO .27IUiemlller 40 B.l Vl Sargent. 424 111 .261 i Varrlson 23 3.10.1 King... ll 51 2M Coleman 24 2.03 Wolfer.. 5"4 1.10 .2.i7iSullivan . 14 1.071 Pu'h"rM f'4 24 .2.T.V Consistent Cripple, E. Colorado, Takes Second Money; Bill Sharon IMace Third. LEXINGTON. Ky.. Oct. 5. The thlrtv-fourth renewal of the Tran sylvanlH wan won today by Peter the Brewer. The bit; son of Peter the Great in wlnnln-f the event equaled the record of 2;024 for th stake set by Peter Manning in 1920. He was clearly the best and re sponded readily to the call of his driver. Nat Ray, when he was asked for the supreme effort In the stretch. The consistent cripple. E. Colo rado, won second money, trotting a Rood race, while Bill Sharon, the Canadian-bred trotter from the Murphy barn, was third. Great Britton was a top heavy favorite in the bettln-. but the brown stallion was not in form and finished last In the summary. lis got the worst of the start in the first heat and In the" second heat made two breaks. The day was. full of surprises. Dottle Day was expected to win the 2:09 trot but the New York trotter. Pluto Watts, landed the event In straight heats with second money going- to Dottie Day and third to Amarillo McKinney. Lon McDonald won his first race of the meeting- with Wilaska. the daughter of the Northern Man. nar rowly missing the 2:05 list In the first heat. Flnaverra that won the opening day furnished most of the competition. The 2:17 pace went to Peter Cleo. driven by Falin. , V. M. C A. SEASON OPENS Boxing and Wrestling Classes Turn Out for Work. Boxing and wrestling classes at the T. M. C. A. turned out yesterday for the lrt time this season. Andy ASTORIA ELEVEPI HEffl LINE EXPECTED TO AVERAGE ABOUT 183 POUNDS. Multnomah to Send In Strongest Men Against Invaders From Down Columbia. - If beef counts in football, the Astoria eleven, which plays Mult nomah on Multnomah field tomor row afternoon, may make it plenty hot for the clubmen. The Astoria squad is made up or a husky bunch of gridironers. Billie has a couple of 20fl-pounders, sev eral 195-pounders and a whole flock of players scaling from 18a to ISO. The Astoria contingent snapes up like this: Ends, Peterson 165 pounds. Tcnnant 172. Merrilla 175. Trotter 165 and G. Olson 176: tackles, Co- covieh 1ST. Anderson 185. Backland 200. Theadeaus 198 and Carlson 184; guards, Dunc&a 195, Nordstrom, iirtl, Olson 195. Wilson 193. Jussila 195, ard Gustafason 188: centers. Plantin i 1?5 and Bay 175; quarterbacks, W. vvmcKson 14S, T. w iiickson 140 and A. Olson 150; halfbacks, Pentilla 180, Borman 180, Riley 175 and Urell, fullback. 163. Coach Billie has not announced his opening lineup, but it will be picked from these players. He figures that his line will average around 183. Multnomah will have a line itself when the whistle blows at 2:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon for the tirst football game of the season here. Coach Ted Faulk is not going to take any chances of the club team's losing or making a . poor snowing against Astoria, and will send in the strongest team possible. .loerueea to J: lay uiympla. ABERDEEN, Wash., Oct. 6. (Spe cial.) The Aberdeen and Olympia high school second football teams will clash on Stewart field here Friday afternoon. Coach Herreid of Aberdeen has a scrub team, which has shown well against the first eleven and which he thinks will make a good showing against Olym pia.' The, first team ha.3 no game Ihia week. Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state it aj our honest belief that the tobacco used in Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better taite) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggttt & Mym Ttbata Civ Chesterfield. CIGARETTES .cfJTurldsh and Domestic tobaccos blended Johanser. has charge of the box In division and Ray Lesher is again looking after the Y. M. C. A. grapplero. t Athletic activities of all kinds ara getting under way at the T. M. C. A? Twenty-four volley ball teams havs been organised and several will be added. The Clvlo Clubs Athletic as sociation will start Its schedule of basketball on th. T. M. C. A. early In November, according to present plans. IIOKSESIIOE TITLE IS WON Higdon anil Hall Prove Itrxt Tov er at Linn Tourney. ALRANY, Or.. Oct. 5. (Special ) I. K. Ridgon and B. K Hall of Wood burn, won the Willamette valley horseshoe pitching tournament st the Linn county fair this afternoon by defeating Glenn Junkln and II. M. Morrison of Albany In th. finals, S-21. 21-5 and 21-14. Ten teams, among them the best tossers in the valley, competed for honors. In the final game Ridgon and Hall threw six ringers, losing part of the score to Junkin and Morrison, who topped two of the throws for no count. The contests started at 10 o'clock this morning, lasting throughout the day. To reach th. finals th. Woodburn men defeated Fry and Underhlll of Albany. Brnm-n and Wire of Albany. Ilortenhack and son of Eugene. The runners-up de. feated Farley and Reynolds of Al bany, llortenback and son of Eu gene. Brown and W'lr. and tHev-art and Iloran of Albany. Mt-Latne and son of Rhedd were eliminated by Brown and Wlr. In the firbt round of play. TED THYK TOSSES NOBBECK Two Out of Three Falls Won In Match at Albany. ALBNY. nr., Oft. S. fSoeclsl I Ted Thye. Portland wrestler, won two out of three falls from Moi.se Norbeck, Canadian, In a finish match here last night at the armorr. Thye was the sggressor throughout and showed up more dangerously than his heavier opponent. Thye obtained th. first fall at th. end of 14 minutes with a to. hold. Norbeck came bark strong and won the second 111 In 21 minutes with an arm sclssr-rs and half nelson. The third fall went to Thy. la eight minutes with a toe hold. Aberdeen Flxln-r Schedule. ABERDEEN. Wash.. Oct. t fp.- tn I. Hnnutsm and Aberdeen hl.h s-hools msy r'"J t fnU games this fall. Th. school su'nor. Ules ar. consl'lerttjg the p'sn of one gn- Armistice day and an other Thanksa-lving Amy Ir. sever, i years In th. pnst lbs s-h oi. hsv. stajfed a hri of ssrrs o You will respect and admire this emblem X x ' ' 1 1 11 movcdvS to wf 9 VX trt WAIL Fall Fishing! That mn nir?ftn ir-m! b ronn t h ! ht h ft &v it) Backus & Morris 1 "tH.. W n i 1 I I, . 7 y mk s' .A v A speaking of quality Every few dayi a HARDtMAN wearer tr!I Hardeman dealer how well Habdfman Hats wear. Many have been worn every day for twu yean and still look fine. I low's that for quality juit try one on. Made on Vie Pacific Coatl w V A rfAR D'EMAN Phonq Youx .Want Ada to The Orcsonian, Slain 707Q