TIIE 3I0RXIXG OREGONIAX, FRIDAY, . NOVEMBER v 3, 1922 16 EfflS DRAW IN GO WIN NRGY brown Remains Firmly Set on Kangaroo Battler. h KNOCKOUTS ON CARD '"islic Menu From Soup to Xuts One of Greatest Hereabouts in Many a Dog Watch. The Australian middleweight title find likewise the Pacific Coast mid- lie crown remain firmly planted on he flaxen head of Tom King, that rand old fighting squire from Cangaroo land. All efforts of one fV'alley Trambitas, alias Jimmy Jarcy, to jar King from his laurels were futile and their ten-round cuffle at the Milwaukie car barn Vednesday night ended in a draw. While the main event went the lull scheduled distance, the same annot be said of the four prelim- naries. Every bout preceding the uain argument ended in a knock- ut. And the knockouts were as orted at that, no two being of the ame variety. Four of them in one light is some record. Taking the whole fistic menu rom soup to nuts it was one of the reatest fighting cards seen here bouta In many a dog watch. The reliminaries kept Referee Tom vouttit swinging his good right rm like the pendulum on the old hall clock counting the boys out.- Draw Well Deserved. In the main evnt it was King's nfighting that carried him through nd earned for him a well-deserved I raw. The Australian was the ggressor practically to the end. In nly two rounds, the eighth, when Jarcy had him bleeding at the nouth, and the tenth, which, Darcy ook by a good margin, was the big loumanian able to slow up the Australian. King tore Into Darcy from the ery start and getting inside Jim- ny's swings, ripped and slashed at arcy's midriff till it was a baby ink. Occasionally he would bring ne overhand and catch Darcy on he mug. Darcy attempted to keep ut of the clinches but King was io more out of one clinch than ie would slip into another. In the ixth King copped Darcy a shiner n his right eye and it bothered the loumanian considerably for the est of the Bout. Darcy could do little with King n the clinches. At long range arcy was more effective and in iiese exchanges shook the Austral- in with left jabs and hard rights o the ace. There was no weight ifference. as both boxers weighed 64 pounds. Ortega Knocks Oat Richards. Eddie Richards made the mistake f trying to go in and slug with lattling Ortega and all but got his ead knocked off when Ortega inally got to him and planted him or the full count in the second ound o their scheduled six-round o. It was all Richards in the pening session, but in the second he old battler got up steam 'and vhaled ' away at Richards until lichards was punch drunk. It was n easy matter the fr--t)rtega to ut over the finishing punch. He valloped them in, one after the ther, until Richards swayed and ell. The Johnny Trambitas-Jack Dal- on bout ended almost before it tarted. In the first round Johnny aved the way for a knockout by amming in hard lefts and rights o the soldier's belly. He then wung over a hard crack to tne ead and Dalton was out for the en count, and then some. Trambitas showed vast improve ment over his last start here and learlv demonstrated that he can eally fight when he wants to. The rip to California with Bobby Evans eems to have helped tne boy lm- easurably. Evans has taught him b go in and finish them. If he ghts like that he will be a great ard. Bud Fisher stopped Jack Dillon the third round of their sched ed four-round bout, and Chick Locco made the birdies sing for oung Britton in the second round f another four-rounder. In both ises the bouts were stopped by ceferee Louttit, -who figured that 'illon and Britton had taken uough. ENTLEY SOLD FOB $65,000 n Addition to Cold Cash, Giants ( to Deliver Three Players. CHICAGO, Nov. 2. Baseball Com lissioner Landis announced today lat Jack Bentley, pitcher of the altimore club, cost the New York iants $65,000 in cold cash and three layers to be delivered on or before uxt March 20. In the event the players are not itisfactory they are to be returned v the Baltimore club by April 5 nd in lieu or tnem the minor league b is to receive $2500 for each an, making the total amount of oney involved $72,600. O'Dowd Beats Wells. CENTRALIA, Wash., Nov. 2. Special.) Young O'Dowd, Aberdeen irhtweight, defeated George Wells Los Angeles in their six-round ait, the main event of a smoker aged in Tenino last night under e auspices of the Tenino Athletic ub. O'Dowd's sensational attack the last round gave him the deci pn. In the semi-final Eddie Mc irthy of Olympia and Bill Lewis of tattle went six rounds to a draw, here were three other bouts on ,e card. Prendcrgast Is Reinstated. CHICAGO, Nov. 2. Commissioner mdis tonight reinstated "Mike" rendergast, pitcher, formerly with e Philadelphia Nationals, who had en placed on the suspended list ,r playing with ineligibles. The .nimissioner fined the Springfield, o., club of the Western associa on, $500 for violations of the league Jary limit and for making what ; declared were false statements 1 0 Hooters Back V'p Hood River. HOOD RIVER. Or., Nov. 2. (Spe al.) One hundred and forty stu nts and citizens signed today to company the Hood River high hool football team on a trip to ufur, where tomorrow the eleven eets the husky aggregation of the ufur high. Hood River is expect g one of the hardest fights of the ason. f $80,000 Purse Hung Vp. BALTIMORE. Nov. 2. An $80,000 rse, the largest stake offered for horse race, will be hung up by the Maryland Jockey club for the Pimlico futurity next Saturday, to be divided equally, however, be tween the winners of the two di visions into which the race has been divided because of the large number of entries. Thirty entries have been received. FOOTBALL CCP IS DONATED Interest Added in Battle for Southwest Washington Title. -HOQUIAM. Wash., Nov. 2. (Spe cial.) Interest in the outcome of the battle for the championship of the Southwestern Washington Foot ball league, now narrowed to Olym pia, Hoquiam and Aberdeen, has been increased by the announce ment of Ralph Allen, Harbor busi ness man and sportsman, that he would present to the league a silver trophy cup. Permanent possession of the cup is to go to the school winning it two successive years. On Saturday Chehalis plays Ho quiam at Hoquiam, and Olympia plays Aberdeen at Aberdeen. COLUMBIA PLAYS TODAY PREPPERS HAVE CHEMAWA IXDIAXS AS OPPOXEXTS. Braves Fast and Flashy and Are Great at Open-Fleld Running and in Aerial Attack. Columbia plays the Chemawa In dians at 3 o'clock today on the Co lumbia field at University park. It will be Columbia's first home game of the year. The preppers have played two hard battles so far, los ing to the "Oregon Aggie rooks, 16 to 13, and holding the Oregon fresh men to a tie score, 7 to 7. The Indians are not as strong as once upon a time, and lost their opening game to Willamette uni versity Saturday, 52 to 6, but they are fast and flashy and great at open-field running and in the for-wrd-pass attack. Columbia's second team .plays the Christian Brothers' Business col lege eleven at 1:30 o'clock in a pre liminary game. Th3 Indians will arrive this morn ing and hold a light workout on the university field. F. Jacobberger will referee, Don Morrison will umpire and Earl R. Goodwin will be head linesman. The probable lineups: Columbia. Chemawa. Geenty or Logan '...LB Crlm Van Orden LT Ceheka Hasgert LG Masten McElhaney ., C Shiskin Hicks RE Keeta Ransavage RT Strom Doherty RE Donnelly Cudahy Q Buchert Schulmerich LH Abraham Johnson RH Bryson Collins F Simmons JJIGK BRinON TO BEST EX-CHA.MPIOX GIVES CREDIT TO CONQUEROR. Opinion Expressed Mickey Walker Will Be Great Title-Holder; Performance Is Praised. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) NEW YORK, Nov. 2. While Mickey Walker, 'the new welter weight champion, was dividing his time between here- and his home town.Elizabeth. N. J., this after noon receiving congratulations from every side, Jack Britton, the deposed champion, stayed away from his usual haunts and was preparing to hurry away for the Maine woods, where he proposes taking a long rest. Jack spent most of the day at his home in West One Hundred and Seventy-ninth street with his wife and three children, Billy, Bobby and Betty. The ex-champion was ready to give his conqueror all due credit for his victory. "I guess I started once too often," said Jick. "That man Walker was too tough for me and I think he is going to be a great champion. He has my hearty congratulations for his great performance." William Muldoon, chairman of the boxing commission, was very en thusiastic about the bout. "I think it was one of the greatest I ever eaw in my life," he said to day. "Britton played the part of a man 100 per cent. And if there is anyone who now has any suspicion the bout was not on the level he is either an imbecile or a rogue." VPPEKCLASS ELEVEX WINS Reed Freshmen Defeated in Final Quarter, 14 to 7. By throwing their superior weight against the freshmen eleven for a touchdown in the final quarter Reed college npperclassmen defeated the yearlings 14 to 7 after the freshmen had ted the score in the last ses sion yesterday afternoon. The freshmen fought every min ute and held their heavier opp'onents 0 to 0 in the first half. When the junior-seniors shifted from an aerial attack to straight football in the second half, they carried the tall straight to a touchdown which was scored by Riddle. The freshmen scored in the third quarter when Anderson completed a long pass and crossed the line after Altman had recovered a punt fum bled by the upperclassmen on their 30-yard line. The upperclassmen re ceived on the kickoff and pushed 60 yards up the field for the win ning points. Myers, Anderson, Dambach, Hol Ioway and Krichesky starred for the freshmen and Riddle, Graham and Wallace for the upperclassmen. The lineups: ; Upperclass. (14). Freshmen (7). Houston R. E Altman Kehrli '. R. T Davis Scott R- G Moore Graham C Myers Nicol L. G. Mills I.lndstrom L. T Dambach Wallace L. K "vVoodmansee Beich Q Reynolds Riddle R. H... Krichesky Brady L. H Anderson Smyth.. F. B Holloway Substitutions Upperclassmen, Roth well for Houston. Helms for Nicol, Web ster Sor Wallace, Miller for Brady. Freshmen Church for Mills, Mllis for Moore, Pilpel for Krichesky. Referee, Dr. A. A. Knowlton; umpire, James Hamilton; timekeeper, C. McKin Icy; head linesman, A. Jones. Belgian Bicycle Rider May Die. CHICAGO, Nov. 2. Alphonse Speissens, the Belgian bicycle rider, was in the county hospital today with concussion of the brain and his life hanging in the balance as the result of spills of eight riders in the six-day hicycle race. Buker Farm Agent Wanted. BAKER, Or., Nov. 2. (Special.) Whether Baker county will have a county farm agent depends upon the action of the budget board tomor row. A delegation of local business men and farmers petitioned the county commissioners yesterday for inclusion of a fund for an agent in the 1923 budget and received their pledge not to oppose such a move. ew sum. SEEN PIG5K1 S Wisconsin and Illinois Grid Stars Barred. PRO GAMES ARE PLAYED Murray and Augur Admit In eligibility; Four Others Ac cused Maintain Innocence. CHICAGO, Nov. "2. A new up heaval in western conference foot ball circles over the eligibility of players was seen today in the simul taneous announcement that two stars Donald Murry of the Uni versity of Wisconsin and Allison B. Augur of Illinois had been barred. The protest against Murry was made by Coach Zuppke of Illinois, and upon being notified that the plajyer had been declared ineligible, Coach John R. Richards of Wiscon sin declared that he would protest five members of the Illinois squad. Professional Game Echoed. The disbarment of Augur and Murry came as an echo of the fa mous Taylorville-Carlinville profes sional game of last fall which re sulted in the virtual disruption of both the Notre Dame and Illinois football squads, all of the members of the two teams who took part in the contest being ruled out of fur ther participation in conference ath letics. Richards declared that he would fight the Murry case to a finish in the hope of having the ban removed. Augur, when questioned today by George A. Huff, director of ath letics at Illinois, admitted he had played in the Taylorville game and was ordered to turn in his suit and leave the squad without waiting for any further, action by conference officials. Others Assert Innocence. After the protest from the Badger leader was received, Green, Robin son, Durant, Augur and Yates, the men Richards named, were ques tioned and all except Augur asserted they had not played professional football. Murry of Wisconsin was said to have admitted taking part in a professional game but to have held that it did not affect his stand ing as he had not taken any money for his part in the contest. Huff tonight declared that the Illinois authorities were satisfied that Green, Yates, Robinson and Durant are innocent. GAME DELEGATES NAMED Representative Johnson and F. S. Mathias Hoquiam's Choice. HOQUIAM, Wash., Nov. 2. (Spe cial.) Representative Johnson has been chosen by the Hoquiam Rod and Gun club as one of its dele gates to attend the national con vention of the American Protective and Propagation association, to be held December 11 and 12 at the AValdorf Astoria hotel in New York. The other delegate will be F. S. Mathias. The meeting will be in effect a national game conference. Last year Mr.' Mathias represented the club and brought before the con vention the proposal to stop killing elk for their teeth. Mr. Johnson also has been one of the chief work ers for the protection of elk. FIVE AGGIES ON SELF COACH RUTHERFORD HAS TERRIBLE BEAR STORY. First-String Men Out of Game and Likely Will Not Be Back to Play Club Meen. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COL LEGE, Corvallis, Nov. 2. (Special.) The Oregon Aggies will be far from their best grid strength when they meet the Multnomah club eleven Saturday in Portland. Five first-string Aggies are on the bench from injuries and. illness, accord ing to Coach Rutherford, and chances are slight for any one of them recovering in time for the battle. Ted Faulk of Multnomah is only a Eecond-string bear story specialist as compared to Ruther ford. Ed Clarke, the big guard, is in the hospital threatened with pneu monia. Clarke is one of the best guards in the conference, as he is fast, experienced and is a great fighter. He went to the hospital Monday of this week and his condi tion has become critical. Murius McFadden, who has been going so good at end, is lost to the squad, also. He has not been out for prac tice this week on account of a very badly sprained ankle and knee. When McFadden does not turn out for scrimmage it is because he is not able. Other cripples are Luke Gill and Everett Miller, both at half. Gill is still recuperating from the in Jury he suffered in practice before the Stanford game, while Miller de veloped a painful "charley horse" this week. Herb Rich the first string center, will be on the bench, though Mush Hjelte is very capable of filling his shoes at center. Even Captain Percy Locey is hurt and crippled, he has a broken finger, but this will not keep him out of the lineup against Multnomah. Dean Mickelwait will be ready to start in the other tackle berth. On the other hand Buddy Ash will be the only regular .guard Coach Rutherford can start, but he will have Mose Lyman, another six footer, Heiniee Wagner and Floyd Andre to use as substitutes. At tackles Clyde Lee and Bob John son will be held in reserve. Millard Scott is the regular end opposite McFadden. and he is the only man on the team who feels right. To take McFadden's place would should he not be able to start Coach Rutherford will use Ben Car penter or Fred Tebb. Roy Richart is still out at guard from a broken foot. The Aggie backfield is all shot to pieces with Gill, Miller and Hugh McKenna on the binnacle list. Mc Kenna has a pulled tendon. Dick Garber more than likely will be used at quarter.. Ray McCart and Bert Winne will start at halves.. McCart went good except for one bad punt against Stanford. The Aggies feel that , the breaks have been against them so far this season and hope that the Multno mah game will be the tusning point despite their injuries. At least they are going to Portland to meet the clubmen with this in mind. The game will give dopesters their first I chance to compare the University of Oregon team and the Oregon Aggies. The following week the J Aggies lay off in preparation for liio BiaLo cnampionsnip game wmi Oregon, November 18 at Corvallis. College to Have Smoker. MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE, St. Benedict, Or., Nov.- 2. (Special.) A smoker will be held at Mount Angel college Saturday night, beg'nning at 8 o'clock. Frater Norbert Matteucct, matchmaker, has arranged a card of eight bouts. . Each will be three rounds of two minutes each and governed according to amateur rules. The following are scheduled to fight: Kligel vs. Hammel, Rich ard Markillie vs. Robert Markillie, .Whitfield vs. Sowa, Truedell vs. Turnchek, Ronald Cranston vs. Stup fel, Buckley vs. Bernards, Watson vs. Hardin and Capet vs. Hyde. HEIRS FILE CONTEST Cousins Claim Share of Estate of Mystery House Occupant. SAN FRANCISCO. Controversy over the estate of the late Teresa Bell, widow of a San Francisco mil lionaire, whose will cut off her five supposed children, is further com plicated by the filing of an appear ance by a local firm of attorneys as counsel in the contestfor two purported cousins of Mrs. BelL The new figures in the will tangle are named as R. J. Irving McNair and his sister, Mrs. Ida Wlckham, both of Michigan.,: Proof that they legally are cousins would entitle the two under provisions of the will to share in the estate, estimated at close to $1,000,000. Mrs. Bell in a peculiar holographic will left $5 to each of the five Bell children, as serting they were not her offspring' and bequeathed the bulk 'of her es tate to any cousins who might be found, or,1 failing that, to the state of California. The attorneys announced they would seek to uphold the will and to produce a new family histOTy showing that Mrs. Bell was a child of Mrs. Sarah Wilcox Gleason Austin,- sister of the mother of the new claimants. According to the story made pub lic in connection with the appear ance of the new claimants, Mrs. Austin died when her daughter, Te resa, was a small child. Teresa was then taken into the home of Thomas Bell. When a young wo man she married a man named Evans, said to have been head of a Sioux City (la.) street railway sys tem. They adopted three children, it is said. Then Evans died and left his estate to his widow Teresa Aus tin Evans. Later it is asserted the w'idow of Evans became the wife of her foster father Thomas Bell, who had two children by a former mar riage, the story goes. GOATS' BEARD IMPORTED Mysterious Shipment Through Panama Canal Reported. WASHINGTON. Instead of the "bee's eyebrows" or the "lizard's knees." it threatens to be the "goat's beard " pretty quick. Whatever all this modern argot may mean to the rising generation, the "goat's beard" is-indicated as an advance fashion by no less official a publication than the Panama Canal Record, which ordinarily speaks of marlin spikes, garboard strakes and ship chandleries. Wit nesse the following officiaj bulletin: "An item in the cargo of the steamship Felix Taussiq. passing through the canal on August 18 from Pacific to Atlantic ports of the United States, was 47 bales of goats beards weighing 23,127 pounds. Another was 21 bales of human hair stumps weighing 10.487 pounds." Since fashion announces the re turn of the pompoudor it necessarily means the return of the rat" and that accounts for the human hair stumps, but the goats' beards re main a mystery. If a bale of goats' beards weighs approximately 500 pounds how many goats had to be barbered? Maybe the fashion designers are plotting false whiskers for one of the new winter modes. D00RN CLOSELY GUARDED Patrols Accompanied by Dogs of Forbidding Appearance. DOORN, Holland, Nov. 2. (By the Associated Press.) Former Crown Prince Frederick William arrived today for the wedding next Sunday of ex-Emperor William and Princess Hermione of Reuss. Frederick Will iam brought a truck full of bag gage, most of which was presumed to be uniforms for the various func tions. He avoided attention by slipping into the, castle through a small secluded garden gate. The measures for maintaining se crecy as to the nuptials are increas ing as the wedding day approaches. The park is patrolled by men as signed from the ex-kaiser's house hold staff, the patrols being accom panied by mastiffs of forbidding appearance. LABOR PROBE PROPOSED International Conference Plans for World Investigation. . GENEVA, Nov. 2. (By the Asso ciated Press.) An investigation of the extent to which reparations and war debts and the attitude of the other nations toward Russia affect the unemployment situation was de cided upon by the international la bor conference today. The conference adopted a resolu tion to perfect its system, of col lecting statistics and to extend its study of the unemployment question through the international labor bu reau so as to go in the hearing of the questions of reparations, rela tions with Russia and the war debts, on the economic situation generally and the unemployment situation particularly. , STORM HALTS AIR MAIL Service Out of Salt Lake City Is ' Temporarily Abandoned. SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 2. Air plane mail service both east and westbound from Salt Lake City was abandoned today on account of a heavy snowstorm which, according to reports, was general throughout Utah.. The United States weather bureau officials predicted that the storm, which, began yesterday afternoon, would' probably continue until to morrow. ALIEN OFFENDERS TO GO Prohibition Officer Would Deport Foreign Bootleggers. NEW YORK, Nov. 2. Efforts to deport foreign-born " bootleggers will be made by E. C. Yellowley, who has assumed the office of pro hibition officer for the state of New York. "Most of the determined, persis- ApivSCrX'f 'vm -r"J 'vl'::'i!"i.:.".,,'.'g imd pofco, imwsiSWyJ Paac. taf cA Sharing Edge 40 GEM SA4FETY RAZOR CORPORATION, BROOKLYN, tent violators of our prohibition laws," he said today, "are foreign ers, some of whom have been nat uralized and who were, in many in stances, compelled to leave the land of their birth because of criminal conduct." 3 RUSSIANS SUSPECTED American Relief Worker Who Disappeared Possibly Slain. MOSCOW. Nov. 2. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Three Russians who went hunting on October 15 the day Philip J. Shield. American relief worker, disappeared from Simbirsk are suspected by the police as his possible murderers, according to Colonel William N. HaskelL chief of the American relief forces in the field, who has returned from Sim birsk. Ne trace of the trio has been found.. MAN'S HEAD DISCOVERED Grewsome Find Made In Woods ' on Staten Island. NEW YORK, Nov. 2. The head of a man apparently 70 years old, was found today in a patch of woods on Staten island, near Travisville. .. The eyes had been gouged out and Football M.A.A.C. vs. O.A.C. Multnomah Field 2:30 P. Af. Tomorrow The Sporting Goods Store has secured a block . of $1.50 grandstand seats for this big football game. Come today for choice seats. Sixth Floor. times thinner than this newspaper! Slecirically treated steel enables us to perfect an edge one ten-thousandth of an inch thin! USERS were satisfied with Gem Damaskeene Blades. Experience taught them that it was the best blade that could be produced. The users were right but we weren't satisfied. But now it's different. Now, we are satisfied. An electrical wizard has showed us how to eliminate the wire edge and put double life, double keenness, and double comfort into Gem Blades. Heretofore every razor blade, had, of necessity, fixed limits oh its cutting keenness, on account of wire edge. Molecules that compose steel, point in .hundreds of different directions. They won't they cannot take a microscopically smooth edge. With a powerful -electrical treat ment, we now line up the steel mole cules of that mixed mass, so that they all point in one direction. This enables us to put a smooth, unbrok 0UBLE 7 for 50c the teeth extracted. A white cross had been chalked on a tree at the spot where the head was discovered. Mexican Prisoners Strike. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 2. (By the Associated Press.) Five hundred prisoners in the federal penitentiary have gone on strike and are refus ing to do any work because their wpeklv wnires have no-t been paid. en edge on the Gem Double Life Blade. It is the first perfect edge known to the razor world. The Gem Double Life Blade is now on sale at your dealer's. It looks exactly like the usual Gem Blade but the way it breezes through whiskers the way it leaves your face smooth and cool you'll rec ognize the difference instantly. Notice that phrase Double Life on the wrapper. That means not only double the life, but many times the comfort and satisfaction. ' Seven blades to a package, each blade carefully wrapped and the delicate edge protected so that it reaches your razor uninjured. If you haven't a Gem Safety Razor get one of the marvelous $3 De Luxe Models now offered by your dealer at One Dollar ($1) complete. With it youH get these wonderful Double. Life Blades. says El Mundo. The workshops in the penitentiary have been closed and a petition has been sent to Governor Gasca of the federal dis trict requesting that he adjust the situation. Good-Will Is Exchanged. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 2. Radiogram expressions of good-will and devotion to a common cause CIGARETTES now for TWENTY At this price where is the man who can't be discriminating? Lit Fatima tmoittr tell you NEW YORK were exchanged today between Na tional Commander Alvin Owsley, at American legion headquarters, and Charles Bertrand, president of the Inter-allied Veterans' association, in mid-ocean, aboard the steamship George Washington. President Bertrand is returning home follow ing the association's convention at New Orleans. Read The Oregonlan classified ads. Liggett & Mmi Tobacco Co.