THE 'MORNING. OREGOXIAN-, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1923 BENSON TECH BEATS WASHINGTON, G TO 4 TEE DAYS OF REAL SPORT. C EARNS DRAW TRIAL T?T T?TT nn 71 TTTk. x SEND TUBE riVJMlf ".I IVlHrlN COUPON Colonials Taste First Defeat in Three Years. Crown Remains Firmly Set on Kangaroo Battler. GAME IS FREAKISH ONE 4 KNOCKOUTS, ON CARD Losers' Points Scored on Two Safeties, One of Which is Re sult of Unique Strategy. Fistic Menu From Soup to Nuts One of Greatest Hereabouts in Many a Dog jTCatch. 1 TO 18 IN GO WITH DARCY Fortland High School Lea rue Standings. W.L.Pct.l W.L.Pct. Wash'ton... 2 1 .eUTiCommerce. . 1 1.500 Jefferson... 2 I :67Eonson 0 2.000 .lames John 2 1 .667 Lincoln 0 3.000 franklin... 2 .667 For the first time in three years the Washington high school football eleven tasted defeat yesterday in a high school league game. Benson Tech did it on Multnomah field in a struggle that ended in the frean score of 6 to 4 for Benson. Benson's six points resulted from a touchdown just before the end of the second period. Washington's four points were scored freakishly on two safeties, one coming after a Benson punt had been blocked be hind the Benson goal line. The other was an outrignt gift to Washing ton, the outcome of a bit of unusual strategy by the Benson coach. Benson beat Washington at what was expected to be the Washington eleven's strongest point straight football. Benson outcharged and outfought the Washingtonians and in the end outsmarted them. Wash ington instead of sticking to straight football, in which it has been suc cessful for two seasons and part of this one, switched to open play, at which it was not successful. Rose Circles End. Benson's touchdown was put over Just before the end of the first half. A forward pass for 15 yards and a series of line smashes brought the ball from midfield to Washing ton's 15-yard line and the remain ing distance was covered in one play by right half Rose, who cir cled right end for the. score after the entire Washington team had been sucked over to the left side of the line on a criss-cross play. The attempt at goal kick failed. Washington threatened in the third period when fullback Espey . broke away for a 30-yard gain to Benson's 25-yard line. But after plowing through for yardage Wash ington was set back 15 yards on a penalty and finally lost the ball on downs. Washington's second drive for the Benson goal started in the final quarter and again it was Espey, the big fullback, who carried the ball on a long run from the center of the field to Benson's 10-yard line. Benson fought stubbornly on its own five-yard line and held Wash ington for four downs. It was at this point that Washington gained two points On the first safety. When the Benson kicker attempted to punt from behind hia own goal line, the Washington forwards broke through and blocked the kick. In the scram ble a Benson player recovered the ball behind his own goal line, giv ing Washington two point3. Tech Fights Stubborn!. With but five minutes' to p'.ay Washington again headed for th'o. Benson goal and this time was nut stopped until the two-yard mark had been reached. Here Benson put up another stubborn rcsistence tor four downs. Benson did not take a chance on having another punt blocked behind its own goal. Harry Craig the coach, rushed In "a substitute kicker evidently with special orders, for he - did not even attempt to get the ball away. Jnstead he touched it to the ground behind his own goal and gave Washington another safety. It was a most unusual play, but good strategy, as developed when time was called almost immediatefy after. The game also was unique in an other way. It was the only gridiron contest on Multnomah field, so far as the oldest veteran footballist can recall, in which not one off-side piay was called by tl.e head linesman, referee, umpire or any other official There were two 16-yard penalties for holding, both against Washing ton, and one of five yards because a n:ember of the Washington eleven touched the ball after a punt before an opponent did. The lineups: Washington (4) Benson (6) "Jfs L.E Roberts Marriott ........ .ha.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'. ? ,'er & - Ealm I reamer R. G Vauehan Heislnger R. T.l V. ... 7. Bouler ::::::::A:::::::::-Br Substitution Washington. Cook for Lady; Lady for Hodges. Benson. Skaggs for Rose, Mason for Fyock Officials F. Jaccobberger, referee! A. brf uiT' umPlre; Ear R- Goodwin, head linesman. HUSKIES RESUME II PRACTICE NOW UNDER WAY FOR GAME WITH BEARS. Washington Hopes to Win Victory Over Strong California Squad and Annex Championship. UNIVERSITY OP WASHINGTON, Seattle. Nov. 1 (Special.) After two days of rest following their 16-to-13 victory over Washington btate, the University of Washing ton grid squad has resumed prac tice to get in shape for the Cali fornia game here Armistice day The Huskies knew they were up against a real team at Pullman, for they returned with many evidences of the conflict Leo Zeil probably suffered most. The Cougars knew that without him Baggy's men would be helpless in its forward pass attack, so concentrated their efforts against him, the result be ing that he is pretty badly banged up. He will be ready for the Golden Bears, however. It begins to look as if Washing ton has the only team on the coast with any chance at all against Cali fornia. Oregon doesn't play the Bears, so with Washington State fclimina'ed, Washington is the only team btanding between California and Pacific coast championship Calif ptnia will play Washington State Saturday, while the Huskies will be resting. California will have only two or three days at most, to prepare them for the Seattle inva sion after the Cougar game, while Washington will have the whole week for practice. Baggy's eleven is fast rounding into a team of real players. They have weight and fight, as manifested by the fact that . they won the Cougar game in the last 5 minutes of play. Bagshaw has been fortunate o far in not having serious injuries. His men have been injured, hut he always seems to have a man to take his place. Barring a possible injury In practice for the next two weeks, all his varsity possibilities will be in tip-top shape Armistice day. Zeil Is a kicker and passer par excellence. Many who have seen him kick say he is" the best punter ever in Seattle, except for Dink Templeton of Stanford, though some of the boys here never saw Max Eakin of years ago. Zeil's punts spiral high and come down in an almost straight drop. His passing has been responsible for the last two games won by Washington. He throws the pig skin with a bullet-like accuracy. His pf.ss to Hall, which won the Cougar game, was timed perfectly. Hall was running at top speed and the ball arrived just In time for him to snu'eh it from the air and cross for the touchdown. 1ST TITLE TD BE STAKE BUTLER, AMORT WRESTLE FOR CITY CROWN TONIGHT. Anderson Meets Arndt and Olson Meets Glover in Prelimi . naries to Main Bout. Oscar Butler and Paul Amort go to the mat tonight, at the Wood men of the World hall. East Sixth and Alder streets, for what prom ises to be a lively little catch-as-catch-can struggle. Inasmuch as Ted Thye has eliminated himself from the middleweight class for the time being the match will decide the middleweight wrestling title of the city as both contestants are home grapplers. Butler, who graduated from the blacksmith trade to that of a weld er, now operates a shop of his own on the east side, while Amon. is instructor at Benson Tech. Amort, who held the Pacific coast collegi ate wrestling title for four years while attending Oregon Agricultural college, is attempting something that no other grappler except Ted Thye has been able to do, which is to pin Butler's shoulders to the mat. In 53 matches, many of them against some of the best middle weights In the country, Butler has lost but one start. That was to Thye and he gave the Multnomah club instructor plenty of trouble be fore succumbing tu one of Ted's wristlocks. The match will be for the best two out of three falls or a decision at the end of two hours of wres tling. There will be two 15-minute preliminaries. Jimmie Anderson will meet Walter Arndt in one and Earnest Olson will c.lash with Max Glover in the other. High school students holding stu dent body athletic cards will be ad mitted for half price. REED CLASS GAME TODAY Freshmen to Play Upper Class men in Football Contest. Reed college freshmen will play the upper classmen this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the third game of the Reed lnterclass football series. Odds are against the yearlings, with their smaller and lighter teams, so they are depending on grit and an aerial game to win. The freshmen are captained by George Dambach and coached by Harold King. Howard Smyth is cap tain of the upper classmen, who are coached by Dr. L. E. Griffin. Baseball Coaching Profitable. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) NEW YORK, Nov. 1. Pity the poor ex -professional baseball star, who needs must retire and depend upon college coaching for a living. Ray Fisher, ex-star of the Yankees, has just announced that, hia earn ings for nine months at the Uni versity of Michigan, during last year, combined with three months in semi-pro circles, have netted him a sum in excess of anything he ever landed in the big leagues. Jeff Tesreau, director of baseball at Dartmouth, has the same sort of story to tell. Gridders Get Stiff Practice. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. 1. (Special.) The Smoke Shop football Uam is being put through stl'f prac tice .this week for the game here next Sunday with the West Side Athletic club of Seattle. The locals have lost the services of Sloan, quarterback and ex-University of Oregon star, who suffered a badly sprained knee in the game with As toria last Sunday. Phil Shirk prob ably will be shifted from halfback to call signals and Ted Johnson pulled out of guard for a halfback position.. McCarthy interferes with benefit for dying man Personal-Feelings Allowed to Be Interposed With Game That Would Ease Last Moments of Poor Ball Player. BY L. H. GREGORY. WHILE Pa Kilhulen, the ball player, lay dying in Oakland two weeks ago of black smallpox and diphtheria, Bill Ken worthy, former Portland manager, and Joe Devine, scout for the New York Yanks, in the goodness of their hearts, got together two base ball teams for a benefit exhibition game to raise money needed to pay the poor fellow's hospital bills. Not a cent of the proceeds were to go to promoters or players. The grounds were rent-free. There were to be no expenses. All" the par ticipants were giving their services without cost or quibble for the sake of unfortunate Pat. It was announced that Devine would manage one team and that Kenworthy would manage the other and play second base. The Duke has a big following in Oakland, and the fact that he was to piay him self meant added interest and the certainty of a larger gate. The game was announced for Sat urday. On Friday William H. Mc Carthy, president of the Pacific coast league, whose bitter animus toward Portland, William H. Klep per and Kenworthy himself has been repeatedly and unmistakably shown, called Devine by telephone and told him Kenworthy must not play. Devine personally went to see Mc Carthy and protested that this was in no sense a coast league game, though many coast leaguers were to play, but solely and entirely a benefit game for charity; that, though Kenworthy, under the Judge Landis decision of earlier this year. i could not play in the coast league itself, he was eligible by the judge's own ruling to play elsewhere; that he was a free agent, besides, by action of the coast league directors, and that, in any case, this game was to help a dying man and that to bar Kenworthy as a player and a drawing card was most unjust and unreasonable. McCarthy would not yield. The plea that it was to help a dying man fell on ears that heard not. Kenworthy must npt play. If he did play, coast leaguers who plalyed with or against him would do so at their risk. Of course, that settled it. Threat ened with the likelihood of severe punitive action by the president of their league, the coast leaguers, who had volunteered to. help, naturally were afraid to go through with it if Kenworthy insisted on his rights. So Kenworthy, much as he desired to help swell the gate for hia old teammate, withdrew. That might have ended the mat ter, but It didn't. Among the Oak landers helping promote the affair Winning Foottall Plaw A a o oo . 0 HARVARD This play illustrates one of the simplest means of catching a de fensive team unprepared. It is a straight line buck, aided by an element of deception. The play is made from the close formation. The left end blocks the defensive tackle out and then goes down after one of the defensive backs. The left tackle charges the .op posing guard. He should work to gether with the left guard, who is next to him. The left guard blocks the oppos ing guard out. The right guard blocks his op ponent to the right. The center blocks his man as in dicated. The right tackle goes Immediately to the defensive backs. The right end likewise goes im mediately to the defensive backs. The No. 1 back smashes the de fensive tackle. The No. 3 back fakes receiving toe p 90 o 1 was a fan named Ambrose. He tele graphed Judge Landis, explaining the circumstances and asking per mission for Kenworthy to play. The answer came next day from Judge Landis' office in a message signed by his secretary and right bower, O'Connor. His telegram said the judge was out of town, but then went on to overrule McCarthy di rectly by saying that he (the judge's secretary) knew of no reason why Kenworthy should not be permitted to take part in the benefit game. Unfortunately that reply came too late for Kenworthy' to play, and the game went on without him. But what do you think, fans what can you think of a man, president of a great baseball league, who would so misuse the authority vested in his high office as to let personal feelings interfere with a benefit that might make a little easier the last moments of poor Pat Kilhulen? How long, O Lord, how long must the Pacific coast league endure this man McCarthy? Now that Ted Thye has definitely . ...... l.iu lUluulbntigUl LU ,i J - i:iug ill wic 115 u L-iico. v icrjs, Butler is Portland's leading middle weight wrestling contender. Butler has been coming fast of late. He has a real following and his admirers be lieve he has it in him to reach the top rank in his class. Butler is a deceptive looking fel- . low in street clothes. He is thin- i faced and modest, not at all of the j bruiser type you'd expect in a rising young professional wrestler. Bus when he strips he is broad-shouldered and well muscled. Butler got Into wrestling by ac cident. He was a blacksmith by trade, a strong, powerful fellow who delighted in mixing with an op ponent in rough-house grappling match, clothes on and no "holts" barred. Nobody could throw him In that sport and one day four years ago when "Strangler" Smith, the wrestling cop, found himself unex pectedly without an opponent in a scheduled match, Butler, Just to be obliging, went on against him. To Smith's astonishment and his own, ho threw Smith twice in 14 minutes and the bout ended right there. That caused Butler to do a little thinking, the upshot of which was his decision to become a profes sional wrestler himself. He has been at it four years now. Veterans in wrestling will tell you that no grappler cart begin to know his j five years. Butler says himself that only within the last year has he really realized what it was all about. But he has been a fast learner and is getting better all the time. His 0 L - , TRICK BUCK. ball from the center and pretends to make a pass. - ' The quarterback starts slowly toward the right, acting. He calls the signals as he is moving out, as if the play were not ready to start. While he is calling the signals the ball is snapped and the play goes. The No. 2 back, receiving the ball from the center, carries it straight ahead into the line. The entire team must simulate unpreparedness before the ball is snapped. The Idea is to catcth the defensive team mentally and physic ally off-guard. Harvard used this scheme in one of her important games in 1921 with great success, scoring a touchdown on the play. The underlying idea is as old as the game of football, yet it works year after year. It is one of the standard schemes for deception. , (Copyright. 1922. by Major Ernest Graves and Jehu J. ilcEwao), rt strength and aggressiveness carried him over the stage where smarter vrestlers might have overcome him, and now he knows the holds and how to apply them with, any of the boys. I-n.63 matches in four years he has lost only one and that was to Ted Thye, the old master, who besides knowing very much more about wrestling than Butler did, out weighed him as well. So Butler has nothing to feel discouraged about in that one defeat. Butler is opening a winter wrest ling campaign in Portland tonight at Woodmen of the World hall, East Sixth and Alder streets, against Paul Amort, ex-amateur middle we'ght champion who recently turned professional.' It ought to be a good, fast match. " The Washington State college football players will pass through Portland today en route to Berkeley, where they play the California Bears Saturday. Gus Wech, the Chippewa Indian coach of the Washington Staters, isn't particularly hopeful about the game. Welch is one coach who. never makes alibis, but McKay, his star lineman, is out from in juries received in the game with Washingtonlast Saturday and seme ol the other boys are not feeling their best. Welch has a powerful at tacking team, though, and promises to make it as tough for California as possible. Last year the California-Washington State game was played in Port land and it was the "big game" of the year, for Washington State at the time looked like the runner-up fcr California's laurels. The Bears won by two touchdowns. The year before Welch's eleven had been over whelmed at Berkeley by a 49 to 0 score, but that avalanche of touch downs was due primarily to the fact that the Washington Statera. were disorganized and suffering from internal dissensions that de stroyed team effectiveness. There has been nothing like "that in the last couple of seasons. - After playing the Bears the Wash ington State team has another tough game the week afterward at Eugene a gainst the University of Oregon. While Washington is playing Cali fornia, Oregon will have an idle Sat urday. With two weeks to bring his team around and drive it on offen sive plays. Shy Huntington ought to be able to send a real eleven onto the field for that struggle. Football Facts. (Copyright, 1922, Sol Metzger.) Q. Team lines up on opponents' 10 yard line. Field Judge noted that time was up and tried to honk his horn. Horn was broken. Before he could notify two teamsaa. play was run off an1 a touchdown scored. Could it bo allowed under rules? A. No. Time was op before the play was made. Therefore, it is up to referee to declare . it no touchdown. Rule 4, section 1. Q. Rule about man coming out of line before ball is snapped says he must be 5 yards back when ball is put in play. Suppose end plays a yard or so behind the line and a back has taken bis place, can't the end then run toward bis own goal as ball is snapped without going 5 yards behind his lino of scrim mage? A. Yes. Rule 9, section 5, states that "if a player Is moving from the lire of scrimmage towards his own goal i;ne, he must, at the time the ball is put in play, be at least 5 yards back of the line of scrimmage." Q. Is it permissible to shift a tackle to the end of the line on one play, then shift him back to tackle? If so, can the end who played tackle on one play then return to end and later change positions in backfleld with a back in bis place on the line? A. Yes. ,Rule 9, section 4, states that no man occupying the position of center, guard or tackle may be dropped back from the line of scrimmage on offense, before the ball is put in play, unless he be at least five yards back of the line of scrimmage when the ball is put in play. The second paragraph states that "1 fa captain desires to shift the center, guard or tackle into the. backlielt he may do so after notifying the referee; but the player so shifted shall not again return to one- of the middle line pos-. itions. Any one of these men may. how ever, be taken five yards back without consulting the referee, and may Ipter leturn again to bis position." Nothing said about end. Q. On a shift play, that Is, where a tackle comes back of line more than 6 yards, does the back who takes his place have to be in exact position tackle vacated on line of scrimmage? A. No. But he must conform to the rule requiring seven men to be on the lino of scrimmage when ball Is put in play. Under the rule he may take' up any position on the line of scrimmage. Rule 9, section 1, par. 3. Q. Team punts ball from behind Its goal-line and punt crosses intersection of side-line and goal-line. 1 this a safety or is it opponents' ball, first down, on your goal-line, which would be a touchdown for them? f A Rule 6, section 36, last paragraph, covers this. It Is a safety provided bail has not been touched by an opponent. Horseshoe Pitchers Elect. ' HOQUIAM. Wash- Nov. 1. (Spe cial.) The Hoquiam horseshoe pitchers' league has elected offi cers for the winter playing season, as follows: Jess Wheeler, president; A. J. Lewis, vice-president, and Fred Martin, secretary-treasurer. It was decided to play every Tuesday and Friday night throughout the winter in the electrically lighted play shed of the Washington school. A com mittee was named to see that holes in the court are filled with cinders to keep out the water during rainy periods. The Australian middleweight title and likewise the Pacific Coast mid dle crown remain firmly planted on the flaxen head of Tom King, that grand old fighting squire from Kangaroo land. All efforts of one Valley Trambitas, alias Jimmy Darcy, to Jar King from his laurels .were futile and their ten-round scuffle at the Milwau-kie car barn last night ended in a draw. While the main event went the full scheduled distance, the same cannot be said of the four prelim inaries. Every bout preceding the main argument ended in a knock out. And the knockouts were as sorted at that, no two being of the same variety. Four of them in one night is some record. Taking the whole fistic menu from soup to nuts it was one of the greatest fighting cards seen here abouts in many a dog watch. The preliminaries kept Referee Tom Louttit swinging his good right arm like the pendulum on the old hall clock counting the boys out. Draw Well Deserved. In the main event it was King's infighting that carried him through and earned for him a well-deserved draw. The Australian was the aggressor practically to the end. In only two rounds, the eighth, when Darcy had him bleeding at the mouth, and tjie tenth, which, Darcy took by a good margin, was the big Roumanian able to slow up the Australian. ' King tore into Darcy from the very start and getting inside Jim my's swings, ripped and slashed-at Darcy's midriff till it was a baby pink. Occasionally he would bring one overhand and catch Darcy on the mug. Darcy attempted to keep out of the clinches but King was no more out of one clinch than he would slip into another. In the sixth King copped Darcy a shiner on his right eye and it bothered the Roumanian considerably for the rest of the bout. Darcy could do little with King in the clinches. At long range Darcy was more effective and in these exchanges shook the Austral ian with left jabs and hard rights to the face. There was no weight difference, as both boxers weighed 164 pounds. Ortega Knocks Out Richards. Eddie Richards made the mistake of trying to go in and slug with Battling Ortega and all but got his head knocked off when Ortega finally got to him and planted him for the full count in the second round of their scheduled six-round go. It ' was all Richards in the opening session, but in the second the old battler got up steam and whaled away at Richards until Richards' was punch drunk. It was an easy matter then for Ortega to put over the finishing punch. He walloped them in, one after the other, until Richards swayed and fell. The Johnny Trambitas-Jack Dal ton bout ended almost before it started. In the first round Johnny paved the way for a knockout by slamming in hard lefts and rights to the soldiers belly. He then swung over a hard crack to the head and Dalton was out for the ten count, and then some. Trambitas showed vast Improve ment over his last start here and clearly demonstrated that he can really fight when he wants to. The trip to California with Bobby Evans seems to have helped the boy im measurably. Evans has taught him to go in and finish them. If he fights like that he will be a great card. ,Bud Fisher stopped Jack Dillon in the third round of their sched uled four-round bout, and Chick Rocco made the birdies sing for Young Britton in the second round of another four-rourfder. In both cases the bouts were stopped by Referee Louttit, who figured that Dillon and Britton t had taken enough. DRY LI IS BASEBALL GREAT IXCREASE IX ATTEND ANCE ACCOUNTED FOR. 'Prohibition Has Been Greatest Blessing Sport Ever Enjoyed," Says T. J. Hlckey. - (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) CHICAGO. Nov. 1. Thomas J. Hickey. president of the American association, in discussing the in creased attendance at games in his circuit during the last season de clared that the- Increase was due to the dry law. According to Mr. Hickey, the season Just closed, was a record breaker in the point of at tendance and, in explaining the In crease, he said: "Prohibition has been the great est blessing baseball ever enjoyed. The passing of the saloons increased our patronage wonderfully. Regard less of the moral aspect of the 18th amendment. It was a great business booster for us." Mr. Hickey explained that in the old days men used to drop Into the corner saloon for a drink on the way to the ball park. Other pros pective fans would drop in for the same reason. Time would pass, as time would In a saloon, and a bit later the eastern scores would be gin to come in on the ticker and the prospective fans would stay in the saloon, getting the scores off the ticker. On the other hand, Mr. Hickey does not believe that golf cut down baseball attendance to any consid erable degree. "It costs money and takes a great deal of time to play golf," he said. "The lads from 18 to 25 form the bulk of the baseball patronage and, as a general rule, they do not play golf much." Swimming Splashes. With the Seal Rocks swim at San Francisco recently, the 1922 Paclflo as sociation swimming season came, to an end. The only remaining aquatic activi ties of importance are the National Ama teur Athletic union water polo cham pionships, to be held between Novem ber 10 and 18 at Stanford university, and the Pacific association 220-yard breast 5 ways to bettet Gentlemen: We are soap experts, and have been for 60 years. The leading toilet soap of the world Palmolive-. is one of our creations. Years ago we set out to make a new-type Shav ing Cream. V?e aimed to excel all others in fiv important ways. We made tip and tested 130 different formulas. 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According to unofficial figures, for no official figures are compiled, the Paoific association swimming cnamplonshipa for 1922 were won by the Olympic club with 117 points to 25 points for Pacific City. Swimmers point with regret to" the return of the conditions of ten years ago, when the Olympic club was practically the sole power in aquatics about San Francisco. There could be no com pet i tion until Bill Coffman got together his young Men's Christian association team, which won in 1912 and 1813 both th Pacific association and the Pacific coast swimming championships. Then in 1914 the surf beach team of Alameda laid the foundation for a period or great rivalry netween tne Olympic club swimmers and the teams from the beaches and bath houses. The Piedmont Swimming club, which later became the Oakland Athletic club, carried the bur den of furnishing the winged O" with competition during the war, and for the first year after the war, 1919. The basic fact was overlooked at the close of last season by the Pacific asso ciation, when Sam Goodman, at the re quest of his registration committee, had legislation passed at the annual meeting of the Amateur Athletic union in Chi cago, which required sanction fees fjr all practice and open meets conducted by the beach and batn house teams. Since practically all new swimmers in the Pacific association have been de veloped at the practice meets of these clubs at the beaches, and since the beaches have not considered them worth conducting with the sanction fee slapped on, this year has been virtually barren of new material in the swimming game. Only Don Salvador, a visitor irom the Philippines, and Arden Allen, a Lowell high school swimmer, have been added to the list of swimmers of tho Pacific association. Handball League Organized, MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE. St Benedict, Or.. Nov. 1. (Special.) A special meeting of the members of the handball league was held at Mount Angel college Tuesday morn ing. t The following were elected: Henry Kropp,. president; Charles Foster, secretary-treasurer. Two divisions were formed In the league, class "A" and class "B." and cap tains choften. j I "There's something Ml I about them youll like n I It isnt this it isn't that I I it isn't the other thing. -i I It's the quality combina- I J tion of all it's Tareyton. I 1m tondoaS llilil Tarextnns nr. Shaving Cream ft 1693 On Salt Everywhere I TO NEXT BQXIXG CARD WILL BJ, NOVEMBER 9. Battlers Who Once Fought t Draw Agree to Weigh 147 Pounds Day of Bout Bobbv Harner nnrl TmwIa rtowi will provide the next flstio enter talnment at the armory. They me In the ten-round main event of th Portland boxing commission car Thursday nicht. KnvtHo a Ti. date for this bout first was aiu nouncea lor November 7. but a that is election night the commif sion decided to put the show ove for a counle of ilavq Both boxers have agreed to mM 147 pounds at 2 oclock the day oj tne Dout. unariey Jost, manager o Harper, .held out for 145 pound but Davis wanted to come in a 147. Jost then asked that the split the difference and make i 146. but after battline t)ia sion for several hours got nowhere: Various promoters and match makers have been trying for som l 1 1 tu ei. iv lur i& i o ri.ll! M bout, but not until he signed fpA ma ruining iigiiL were tney aDle tCi 1 1 TT . . io.uu linn. Lu)ia tiuu xxarper lougll once before, going to a six-roun draw in Seattle. The Best Play to Use. (Copyright, 1922. Sol Matzrer.. With the ball in your possession fourth down, oo your own 10-ya.rd lint' half a yard to ffaln, near end of garotj ana your team leading by a touchdown the play la a punt. Tou cannot affon to risk losing the ball to the opposition aero py iauing to gain, aa one pla might acore for them and tie tou. Punt and make jure the kick Is c-mipi! on,, ana men mat it is not run back If the opposition makes a fair catch all well ana good, as a field goal wll t n".ai you. L