14
TITE MORNING OKEGONIAX, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1922
PADDOCK
RECORD
Eft
E
THERE'S AT LEAST ONE IN EVERY OFFICE.
Mark Claimed by Sprinter Is
. Declared Impossible.
BITTER FIGHT INDICATED
Suspensions of Three Stars Are
Confirmed and Question, of
I 'Women's Division Debated.
NEW YORK, Nov. 20. (By the As
sociated Press.) The virtual rejec
tion of seven records submitted on
behalf of Charles W. Paddock, Los
Angeles Athletic club sprinter, be
cause of implied faulty timing, and
the decision to leave the question of
controlling women's amateur ath
letic activities to the incoming
board of governors, were the out
standing features of today's meeting
of the Amateur Athletic unin.
Sharp controversy regarding the
acceptance of Paddock's records pre
ceded the final decision of the dele
gates to refer their passage to the
record committee for 1923, which
body will be elected at tomorrow's
session. Jt was fii'it decided to refer
the matter to the incoming board of
governors, but the resolution was
later amended to permit the new
record committee to pass upon the
question.
Acceptance Seems Unlikely.
In view of the fact that the new
commission will not function offi
cially until late in the fall of 1923,
unless special meetings re held, it
was the general opinion of the dele
gates that acceptance of the records
appeared remote.
The records claimed for Paddock
were all made in one race, run at
Santa Barbara, Cal., last July 4.
They included what are claimed as
five world's and two American rec
ords for the distances, rangingfrom
60 to 175 yards. They are as fol
lows: 60 yards, 6 1-5 seconds;. 70
yards. 7 1-10 seconds; 75 yards, 7
3-5 seconds; SO yards, 7 4-5 seconds;
100 yards, 9 3-5 seconds; 125 yards,
12 1-5 seconds; 175 yards, 17 seconds.
Record Meld lmposNihle. .
The d'spute over Paddock's rec
ords hinged on one point, the fact
that only one-fifth of a second
elapsed between the marks for 75
and SO yards. Louis Goldsmith,
chairman of the record committee,
characterized this as a physical im
possibility and as ground for re
jection of all the records, but Lorrin
Andrews, spokesman for the South
ern Pacific association. Insisted they
be accepted. Mr. Andrews said the
records were indorsed by his organ
ization and he read a telegram from
Robert S. Weaver, its president and
former head of the National Ama
teur Athletic union, declaring that
rejection of the records would be re
garded as "an affront" and that a
"fight to the finish would be made
to sustain them.
In sidestepping this issue the dele
gates defeated the recommendation
of its record comm'ttee, which had
voted to reject the records.
Sharp division of opinion de
veloped on the question of con
trolling women's athletics before
final decision was referred to the
incoming board of governors. One
group of delegates favored tak'ng
over direct supervision of feminine
competition, while another group
urged that it be vested in a new
women's athletic federation or
union, which would handle its own
activities, but affiliate with the
Amateur Athletic union to obtain
essential co-operation and co-ordin
at ion.
StiapenHlons Are Confirmed.
Kariier in the day the suspension
of three Chicago athletic stars-
Joie Ray, Frank Loomis and J. O.
Loomis until December 31 for re
ceiving alleged exorbitant expense
money from New York clubs, was
made effective on the recommenda
tion of the registration committee.
It was provided that the suspen
6ion become permanent after that
date unless the funds involved are
repaid as follows; Ray, $100; Frank
Loomis, $20, and J. O. Loomis, $5.
Four other athletes were restored
to good standing after long periods
of ineligibility. They are AJbel I.
Kiviat, former long distance run
ning star; Harry Smith and Frank
Masterson of New York and Gardner
Van Dusen of Spokane, Wash.
William C. Prout of Boston, presi
dent of the Amateur Athletic union,
in an address to the .delegates, re
plied to alleged attacks on the
organization's work during the past
year by declaring the union was
today more strongly intrenched in
public esteem than ever.
President Prout, in pointing out
that American Amateur Union co
operation has been largely respon
sible for the success of American
Olympic teams in the past, pledged
the support, of the organization to
the American Olympic association.
The meeting will close tomorrow
with the election of officers and
various committees for the coming
year and the selection of a club and
city for the staging of the national
junior and senior outdoor champion
ships. Some Record Accepted.
The more important records ac
cepted at today's meeting follow:
World's record. Indoor. 3000 meter run
8 minutes 31 2-5 seconds, by Joie W. Ray',
Illinois Athletic club, at New York, Feb
ruary lq, ja-j.
American records, indoor:
SOOO meter walk. 12 minutes 54 aei-nnrfa
by William Plant. Morningside Athletic
cruD, .-sew iorK, February 38, lit2.
Running high jump. 6 feet 4 inches,
by J. M. Murphy, Notre Dame univer
sity, at New York, February 1, 1W22.
00-yard dash, 8 2-.1 seconds, by Loren
w. luurcnison, jinnois Athletic club, at
i,ew rorK. fl eDruary 1, 1122.
t-oie vault, iz left Sii inches, bv K. to
Meyers, Chicago Athletic association, at
'unicago, .warcn ji, jin'i'.
Awu-iime reuty uour runners), 7 min
utes a 1-a seconds, by Penn state col
lege -team,, at New York, February 1
1922.
World's record, outdoor: '
Two-mile relay, 7 minutes 40 2-5 sec
onds, by university of Pennsylvania (In
T'-am, Kx. niereunn, .1. j. Holden, B. Me-
jnuiien. u H. .Brown), at Philadelphia,
April 29. 1022.
Throwing junior discus (7-foot circle)
113 reet, oy Clarence Houser, at Car
pentaria, i.ai., jviarcn Jj, 1922.
Putting 12-pound shot. 56 feet. 3 Inches
by Clarence Houser. at Filmore Cal '
February 18. 1922.
Sixteen-pound shot (7-foot circle) 46
feet Inch by R. G. Mills, Hill school at
I'ottstown, fa., April 23, 1921.
ATHLETIC BODIES MAY JOIX
National Federation Will Invite
Amateur Union to Merge.',
WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 20.
The board of governors of the Na
tional Amateur Athletic Federation
of America, decided at a, meeting
here today to invite the amateur
athletic union to join the federation
and in turn voted to seek admission
to the American Olympic association,
Recognizing that certain differ
ences exist, In the constitutions of
Jim
I rr-i A
.se-r.
I'M SfTLLlMfi CHANCES
BEAUTIFUL MAMICURG
..: EACH NUMBER. Yokj
H A-S A GlRu'S NAME -
vSetlect Your, favoritg
mame amD Pull, cot Ths
WUMBER- Vo'lI PAV ACCORDING
Th J5IZE OF" NUMBER
l 7haTo
.STRamGS -
4-0O IS I HE
H16HGS i J
OHH I've Gor
To fAy Vou
4J3. ??-
I
1 fA
V I N - ;'
I - . 1 I . -. . -T- -S I
, r ' ,
f t v. ' MALCOLM - wamT To Take 1 " I :
GeeVH. y 5 A chamCe oo a -
Trie HI5H You 5Aij? The -i ' '" , . '1 ) ..
lfc .
: " T
Jack-uJANT To BuV A )
(vJUMBtTf?-- YbU MI6HT j
CT Th PRize: t-oi j
A CBN i.
ARMQHY WILL OFFER
DOUBLE 111 EVENT
Card for Tonight Consists of
32 Rounds in Ring.
NUIMES TO MEET MACKE
the federation and the athletic union,
the board of governors empowered a
committee to meei wun represeuxa-
tives of the athletic union and to
work out the necessary changes that
the union may become a constituent
member of the federation.
TEAMS PLAY SCORELESS TIE
Stephens and East Side Elevens
Battle Without IXesnlts.
Standings of cluhs la Spalding 140-
nmind fontball league:
W . Jj.
Holv Xame 1
Albina Aces .
East Side . .
Stephens
Goose Hollow
Kenton
Woodstock .
Home A. L.
.. 1
.. 1
.. 1
T. Pet.
o low
0 .M30
1 .li4
1 .400
0 .382
0 .HIS
O .S33
0 .143
SENTIMENT FOR CALIFORNIA
AS PENN STATE OPPONENT
Bears' Duty Is to Maintain Prestige of Pacific Coast Football in
Intersectional Contest. '
In what was one of the best
games tins season in me opaunns
Junior league the Stephens Athletic
club played the East Side Juniors to
a scoreless tie Sunday afternoon on
the. East Twelfth and East Davis
street grounds.
Stephens played the better game
throughout, but many ff-6ide pen
alties cost its chances to score. In
the first quarter Stephens worked
the ball from its own 40-yard line
to East Side's 6-yard line, only to
be penalized 5 yards and later to
lose the ball on.downs just one foot
from the goal line. Fumbles were
frequent by both teams.
For Stephens the work of Tass
man. Veach and M. Chiotti on the
offensive and C. Chiotti, Lodwig and
King on the defensive was good at
all times.
Barnes at quarter and Lagelski at
left end were the stars for East
Side.
Stephens lost two chances to
score by a drop kick. Once it missed
by three inches.
Holy Xame Juniors Top League.
Holy Name Juniors won their sev
enth straight game and finished on
top of the Spaulding Junior league
when they defeated the Goose Hol
low eleven on the west end field
Sunday by a score of 27 to 0. Bell
mer, the winner's tackle, kicked on
an average of 35 yards. Albert at
guard and McDonald at center were
stars.
Jimmy O'ConneU 111.
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 20. Jimmy,
O'Connell. outfielder for the San
Francisco club of the Pacific tjoasi
Baseball league, who is to report
to the New York Giants next year.
s ill with scarlet fever at his home
at Boyes Springs, Cal., it was
learned here today. O'Connell was
sold to the Giants for Ji5,0UU. He
will recover, his physician said.
.Albina Defeats Kenton.
The Albina Aces defeated the Ken
ton Athletic club last Sunday on the
Jefferson high school grounds, 24
to 0.
" BY L. H. GREGORY.
THE FOOTBALL, season through
out the country now is in Its
final phase. Championships
either have been decided, or the!
next game will determine them.
Most of the varsity teams wind up
their schedules Saturday, though a
few hold over to Thanksgiving day.
Two coast conference games will be
played on that date Oregon against
Washington at Seattle, and . Wash
ington State against Southern Cali
fornia at Pasadena.
Next Saturday's contests on the
coast include the Washington State
Oregon Agricultural college strug
gle in Portland and the California
Stanford game at Palo Alto.
It has not been a particularly
brilliant football season on the coast.
The only really outstanding featuri
has been the California drive to an
other conference championship, the
third for the Bears in three succes
sive years.
The fact is that the Bears seem to
be stronger than ever. They really
outclass their field. As we have re
marked before, California on merit
is the only eleven that should even
be considered for- the Pasadena
game against Penn State on New
Year's day. No fair-minded person
who lias seen California and the
other contenders in action can take
issue with that statement, for it is
so indisputably a fact.
True, it has been formally an
nounced at California that the
Pears are not candidates for the
honor of defending for the west and
prefer to pass the plum around but
the announcement contained a good,
broad loophole. For it concluded
with the statement, in effect, that
the Bears would play only if public
sentiment forced them to.
Well, public sentiment should do
just that little thing. It is well and
good to speak of a "representative"
coast team, and to say this -is not a
"championship" game, but just the
same the prestige of Pacific coast
football will be at stake. It
almost California's duty to play that
game.
Even so, we believe a Bezdek team
is the only team that really has
chance against the present Bear
eleven. No, ordinary fairly good
team playing conventional football
Bush League Notes
Five basketball leagues will be formed
at 7:30 o'clock tonight at a meeting of
managers of the different league teams
at Spalding s. 'mere win De an eignt
team inter-city league, a heavyweight,
middleweight and lightweight league
and a circuit composed of four or six
girls' teams.
A return game between Stayton and
Amitv hiirh schools will be played at
Stayton Thanksgiving day. In an earlier
came Stayton won. 6 to 0. On Satur
day Stayton won from Hubbard high
school, 34 to 7.
K
Redmord high school, claimant of the
eastern Oregon high school champion
ship, has challenged the Oregon City
high school, undefeated eleven of Clack
amas county. Keamona claims tne
eastern Oregon titie on the ground that
The Dalles hlgn school declines to ac
cept its challenge lor a post -season game.
The Dalles high has not been defeated
by . an Oregon high school this season.
w w
Goldendale, Wash., high school Is
claiming the 1022 mid-Columbia cham
pionship because or its victory over une
Dalles mgn scnooi oaiuruay. 10 in.
It was The Dalles' first defeat of the
season. The game was piayeo. at lioia-
endale.
In their first basketball game of the
season, the Amicus club or fortland,
member -f the Honeyman basketbali
league, defeated the Dayton town team
at Dayton Saturday, 42 to 18. The
visitors were outweighed 10 pounds to
a man.
The football team of the "Washington
state school for the deaf of Vancouver,
Wash., is indignant over the cancella
tion by Jefferson high school of the
tame scheduled for Saturday at Van
couver. Coach Qulgley of Jefferson was
forced to cancel the game as nearly
a half of .his team left town in the
morning for Corvallls to attend the
Oregon-Oregon Aggie game.
Newberg high school had its goal line
crossed for the first time Saturday and
lost to Hillsboro high, 13 to 0, at New
berg. Hillsboro scored its first touch
down in the second quarter on a pass,
Black to Rannow. Clark kicked goal.
In the last period another pass. Black
to Rannow, gave the winners their final
score.
Oregon City high school continued its
winning streak by defeating Gresham
high. 12 to 0, at Gresham Saturday.
Because of the wet field the game was
Blow and there, were many fumbles.
They will be turned over sometime
during spring training. King is
about a .340 hitter, and plays any
field.
Speaking of unacclaimed football
heroes, we nominate for honors a
Matty, Smith Will Fight Wing and
Other Fast Bouts Are Slated
for Official Tourney.
Thirty-two rounds of boxing are
on the card for the Portland boxing
commission's show at the armory
tonight. The two main events will
be ten-round bouts between feather
weiEhts. One of these pits Danny
Nunes of California against Ad
Macke and the other offers Matty
Smith and Weldon Wing. All the
fighters must weigh not to exceed
126 pounds at 2 o'clock this after
noon.
Besides these encounters there
will' be three four-round matches.
Leo Bell will fight Chick Rocco
in the first of the short-time mixes
John Hoff goes against Kid Johnson
of Olympia and Brick Coyle meets
George Hale.
Joe Gorman w ill meet George
Burns again at Tacoma Thursday
night. According to Gorman's han
dler, Willie Bernstein, he is slated
for another ten-round bout in Port
land next month, though the name
of his opponent has not yet been
announced.
Bernstein wants another fight for
Battling Ortega in the near future,
and he prefers Sailor Tom King to
any other fighter as second man in
the ring. 'Ortega was a little too
heavy in his fight - with King at
Milwaukie this month, says Bern
stein, who believes the Battler could
give a much better account of him
self at another meeting.
Nunes and Smith make their first
quintet won their first game Satur
day afternoon by defeating Herbert
Gavin's team by a 12-to-7 score. In
the evening the second game was
played between Dick Evans' and
Balfour Logan's teams, the game re
sulting in a victory of 6 to 4 in favor
of Evans. Sunday Herbert Gavins
hoopers won their first game from
Bert Henderman by a 20-to-10 score.
Northwestern Eleven Practices.
CHICAGO, Nov. 20. The North
western university football squad
today went through a long signal
practice In preparation for its game
with the University of Iowa Satur
day. Most of the time was spent
perfecting new trick plays and
there was no scrimmage. Mikkel-
son, left guard, who suffered a
broken toe in the Purdue game,
will play against Iowa, it was an
nounced. The only player now on
the Purdue injured list is Sam Tay
lor, right end.
cific Coast league Finnesey's dis
barment, was made permanent . and
when he was discovered in the
grandstand at one of the early
games in 1920 he was quietly or
dered to leave and forcibly ejected
by a park policeman when he re
fused to go peaceably. The petition
for injunction and suit for damages
followed."
The importance of the Finnesey
decision lies in the fact that it gives
the owner of a baseball club power
to bar gamblers from his park.
William H. Klepper, now president
of the Portland club but at the time
president of the Seattle club, caused
Finnesey to be ejected as part of a
crusade to wipe out open gambling
at ball games in Seattle.
Had Finnesey won his damage
suit, it would have made almost im
possible any attempt to cub open
gamhline: In baseball parks.
Pavcsi Wins Road Race.
MILAN, Nov. 20. Bonato Pavesi
of Milan won the 100 kilometer road
race from Brescia to Milan, the first
of a series of races in preparation
for the marathon event at the Olym
pic games in Paris inl924. His
time was 9 hours, 51 minutes, 37
seconds. Fifty-eight of the 91
starters finished.
RTJXN'ING OF BALL GROUNDS
HELD PRIVATE BUSINESS.
m 7r v m
'a
yOung man who performs his work ' appearance here tonight. Nunes has
will defeat the Bears. To give them
even a run for it will require an
opponent who can mix something
new in offensive strategy with the
old straight football.
That's exactly what a Bezdek
team does. Hugo Bezdek has ac
tually invented something new in
football offense. There is nothing
In the least freakish about his sys
tem. Far from' it, it's based on the
soundest fundamentals of good foot-
Dau. cut wnere it would give a
severe test even to California' is in
the fact that it so mixes deception
with straight football that the bet
ter a aeiensive team is, the more
likely is it to be fooled for a time,
at least.
Every play on the Bezdek list
now contains that element of decep
tion. There is a feint in every at
tack. To make it good of course re
quires an especially good backfield
and the Penn State backfield this
(year doesn't compare with its back
field of last season. Nevertheless,
you haven't noticed any overwhelm
ing defeats against Penn State, even
with green men In every Penn State
backfield post this season but one.
Penn tate lost to Pennsylvania
last Saturday by one missed goal
kick, and that isn't a licking.
.
The New York Giants have turned
over to the Portland Beavers two
more players on the Rube Walberg
deal. One of them is Rachac, a
pitcher, who broke in with Van
couver in the Pacific International
league two years ago. The other
is Lee King, a slugging right-handed
hitting outfielder who played in the
world's series and got by well. Mc
Graw bought King from Toledo
earlier in the season and paid $15,
000 for him, so he must be quite a
ball player.
Rachac is a right-hand pitcher in
whom McGraw has so much con
fidence that he keeps a string on
him. Rachac and King are in ad
dition to Rube Yarrison and Sulli
van, the pitchers turned over to the
Beavers a couple of months before
the season ended through purchase
by McGraw from the Philadelphia
Athletics. Yarrison was going like
a whirlwind with his underhand
ball when the season ended and Sul
livan though not so far developed,
gives every sign of being a comer.
Besides these players, two others
are due before the deal is closed.
Wiimin $ FooM Plat
J'lSfebj' JT'-rrs &s&ew 6CJ'.sf7Vrr4', JTrssycf f
ONE OF BEZDEK'S SHORT, QUICK PASSES.
M'
ANY coaches have discarded
the long pass down the field!
in favor of the short, quick
pass that gains usually only a few
yards but is much easier of execu
tion. The Navy coach .Folwell and
the Penn State coach Besdek use
this type of pass and have been very
successful with it.
The left end is a decoy on this
particular pass. ' He goes diagonally
out, his mission being to draw one of
the defensive backs away from the
place where the pass is to be caught
The left tackle does not hold on
this pass. He heads straight for
the spot where the ball is to be
caught In order' to interfere for the
receiver the moment that the pass is
completed.
The center, guards and right
tackle hold for n instant and then
they, too, go down to the point of
reception as. interference.
Care ipus-t be taken that these
linemen going down as interference
do not clutter the defensive back
field to the .point of interfering
with their own receiver.
- They must also know that it is
illegal to interfere with the defen
sive backs until after the pass has
been completed. " .
The right end goes straight down
about seven or eight yards. He is
not .the mas wb.o is goingto receive
the ball, but he affects the defensive
back on that side who is forced to
cover him. This makes it easier for
ttie real receiver to get the ball.
The No. 4 back curves around his
own right and receives the pass
about five yards beyond the line of
scrimmage.
The No. 1 and No. 2 backs protect
the passer.
The No. 3 back receives the ball
from the center and with a short
lobbing pass to the No. i back com
pletes the play.
This pass is easy to execute. The
gain usually is not great, but is
enough to insure a first down. It Is
a good complement of a strong run
ning attack.
The linemen going down as inter
ference, whether they interfere with
the defensive backs or not, make
the interception of the pass extreme
ly difficult.
Some coaches figure the forward
pass to be an aid for their running
attack; others figure the running at
tack as an aid for their passing
game. This pass is for the first
named style.
Besdek of Perin State had the
strongest running attack in. the
country in 1921. He aimed to score
by carrying the ball over and usual
ly did. 'He used this type of pass to
perfection.
so unassumingly and with such en
tire absence of "grandstanding" that
lie rarely breaks into headlines al
though he is one of the few really
outstanding backfield men in the
Pacific northwest this year. The
player we. nominate probably will
be more surprised than anybody
else, for he is about the last fellow
in the world to seek newspaper
credit.
We refer to George King, the
University of Oregon fullback. King,
to begin with, has a football build.
He is one of those solid, stocky fel
lows, built from his ankles up, rel
atively short, with big bones and
strong muscles, that a coach auto
matically picks for the battering
ram post of fullback. He has the
build, but, more important yet,
knows how to use it. He hits a
line .beautifully and. with such a
powerful leg drive to assist his
plunge that he often plows a hole
for himself when there was no hole.
Once in that Oregon-O. A. C. game
Saturday we saw him nailed on an
off-tackle buck by three men yet
those sturdy legs kept digging in
and pushing so powerfully that, un
aided, he shoved all three of them
back for two or three more yards.
He was and is just about half the
Oregon attacking power on straight
football. He is a good interference
runner, too, and as secondary de
fense man is sure death on a run
ner who penetrates the first line.
He played a grand defensive game
Saturday, and he always does.
King can stand enormous pun
ishment . without showing it. He
never gets hurt. In his three years
of varsity football ice don't recall
tnat ne ever even has had time
taken out for him--except possibly
to have some sawdjjst wiped out of
ma vye ana ne never nas oeen re
moved from a game because of in
jury. A real honest-to-goodn'ess
fullback that's George King.
, ....
It used to be that the' repre
sentative of one university, scout
ing a rival's football game to get
pointers on its style of play to use
for a coming game against the
rival's team, had to make himself,
pretty scarce. He wasn't welcome'
and though he was considered a
necessary nuisance, no favors were
extended to him.
It's different now. For example,
Gus Welch, the Washington' State
coach, was at Corvallis Saturday to
get a line on the O. A. C. team,
which Washington state plays in
Portland next Saturday. First
thing Gus did was to call on Dick
Rutherford, the Aggie coach, to let
him know he was there. Ruther
ford wasn't or.e whit behind Welch
in courtesy. ' .
"Why, hello, Gus," said Ruther
ford. "Glad to see you. Have you
a good seat? Wait a moment
how'd you like to sit in the press
box up on the roof where you can
get the best view? I'll fix it for
you."
And-Rutherford did. Through his
courtesy Welch' not only got a
grandstand view of his rival's team,
but better yet, a birdseye view.
where he could see every play as
if it were diagrammed on paper. Had
Rutherford wanted to be petty and
small he could have made Gus feel
like an intruder and shunted him
off to standing room on the side
lines. Instead he put him in the
best possible vantage point for
seeing the game and studying the
O. A. C. style of play. That was
real sportsmanship.
Rud Brown, the Oregon right end,
was badly injured in the O.A. C.
game. He is out for the season,
just when Oregon needs him most
for its big game against Washing
ton on Thanksgiving day.
Brown was clipped from behind
on a play and the shock of the col
lision, for which he was not set,
wrenched his right knee in such a
way as to tear the cartilage loose.
The injury is worse than a disloca
tion. His leg from the ankle to the
hip has been put in a plaster cast
and he will be in bed and in that
cast at least for weeks, Brown is
a corking end and in three years
of varsity football it was his first
injury.
This will leave Oregon without
an experienced . end against Wash
ington. Spear at the left wing
played a fine game Saturday, but
this is his first season. Terry
Johnson, a big young fellow of
promise, but green as yet, will have
to fill Brown's shoes, and that is
a hard assignment for any man.
fought quite a bit around San Fran
Cisco bay and is rated as a mixer
of ability. His last fight' was with
Vasquez, a Mexican. Nunes got a
decision over Vasquez in 15 rounds
at Juarez about four months ago.
Smith was in the Australian air
service during the war. He has had
more than 200 fights since he start
ed his ring career a dozen or more
years ago. Macke and Wing are al
ready well known in and about
Portland, having fought here fre
quently. Frank Kendall, manager at Mil
waukie, has announced an innova
tion for the next show of the Mil
waukee boxing commission, Novem
ber 28. . He will cut prices in two.
The top price will be $1.50 instead
of $3 and the bottom price will be
50 cents instead of $1.
"I believe admittance prices have
been too high, considering the aver
age cards shown," said Kendall,
"and te reduction ought to permit
of many more persons being able to
afford a visit to the boxing arena.
"We will match Greb nt Milwau
kie sometime next month with an
opponent to be selected later. Greb's
manager telegraphed me that his
fighter would be unable to appear
here November 28, as he had expected."
King County Court Grants Man
ager Right to Expel Undesir
able Patrons; Gambling Hit.
OLYMFIA, Wash., Nov. 20. (Spe-cial.)-The
owner of a baseball park
is engaged in a private business and
in the absence of a specific statute
he may control it as he will, the su
preme court held today in affirming
the superior court of King county in
dismissal by non-sui of an action
brought by James L. Finnesey
against the Seattle baseball club and
W. H. Klepper and James R. Boldt
as officers of the club. Finnesey
sought damages for alleged unlaw
ful ejection from the Seattle base
ball park and asked an injunction to
prevent interference with his at
tendance at baseball games. Denial
of the injunction also is affirmed.
The owners of a ball park are not
bound by the rules which relate to
common carriers or by the civil
rights statute which has been held
to rule admittance to theaters, the
court held. The admission ticket to
a baseball park is a mere license,
revokable at the will of the pro
prietor, even after the holder has
entered the park and taken the seat
described on the ticket. The money
which Finnesey paid for his ticket
had been returned to him and that
was the only item of damage re
coverable, the opinion said.
TheFinnesey case attracted wide
attention at the time the cohtro
versy started, he being barred from
the Seattle park in the fall of 1919
because of alleged gambling on
games and plays - and because he
entertained players at his home
where liquor was served. By order
of President McCarthy of the Pa-
Foster Still Leads Leasrue.
MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE, St.
Benedict, Or., Nov. 20. (Special.)
In the handball league at Mount An
gel college the following are the
standings of the teams at the end
of the second week of playing:
1 l
IS HE WELL
lll'WjE DRESSED
Iflfe AT I
Wi ! pMl MODERATE
y y cost,
I For Scde by 1
1 All Leading Dealers i
Give Bll
-I by the fill
IV Ox Month r$J
Class A
Foster lo
Kropp 5
Kohlruss 6
Arrighi , 4
Dyer 3
Class B
Coffey R
Porter 4
Royce 2
Leu 0
Won. Lost Pet.
.427
.3(14
.273
inoo
.!.
.4(10
.000
Mount Angel Quintets Play.
MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE, St.
Benedict, Or., Nov. 20. (Special.)
In the junior basketball league at
Mount Angel college. Alfred Walsh's
Lewis Beats Todd in Fight.
LONDON, Nov. 20. Ted "Kid"
Lewis of England tonight defeated
Roland Todd, also of England," in
a 20-round fight for the middle
weight championship and the Lons
dale belt.
Pete K. Ratican Is Dead.
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 20. Pete K. Rati
can, 34, nationally-known soccer
(Copyright, 1922, by Major Ernest Graves player, d'ed today following an op
ted John J, McEwan.) eration. ; .
III
m
20?
each
PAR
THE NEWS TYLE IN
Arrow
Collars
Clctet,Peabody GCo.Inc
fit f Giy ST
$y A by the k g
mmm
taste aUty.
h tobacco
V
&$
I
:' .
XiGCETj & MyersJTcbacco Ccx,