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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JANUARY 26, 100S. THE f CARTOONIST'S IDEA OF THE EVENTS OF THE WEEK IN SPORTS E TO El OF E AMERICAN YACHTS Corvallis Wants to Play in i Portland, but Eugene Op poses Plan. Superiority of the Designers Shown by Upton's Refusal to Race Again. WILL COME NEXT SEASON CUP WILL BECOME RELIC 6 DISCUSS CHANGE UNABL DUAL ANNUAL Both Sides Advance Strong Argu ments, but Metropolis Appears - to Be Best Place for Big Football Contest. BY REFBREE. t The transfer of this year's Oregon ' O. A. C. football game to Portland has aroused no little discussion In state ath- lytic circles, but there Is a diversity of opinion as to the wi3dom of the change. , For several years the Oregon Agricultural College has asked to have the big game ' played here In the metropolis, but the : university has stoutly refused, and has insisted upon a campus game. Commit i tees representing the Athletic Council of : the university and the faculty athletic committee of the Oregon Agricultural College met in this city during the holi- days and drew up a tentative agreement which provided for the playing of the big Rnme in this city during the next four . years, i ne Auueuc uiuimi ui iuc um- verslty refused to ratify the agreement, ' ! but at a meeting held in Eugene last Sat ' urday the football manager was author ; : izrd to arrange the Portland game for this year only. unanimous for a Portland game, but at Eugene the preponderance of opinion is I just tho reverse, although there are a number of Oregon students and alumni r who would like to see the game played , here annually. Why Game Should Come Here. ; Those who want the gamo transferred - to Portland say that both Eugene and I Corvallis are unable to handle the vast crowds that gather for the big event, and ' that many of those who attend are unable to get food or shelter In the college . towns. Many of those who went to Eu gene for the game of last season came away hungry, and the hotels of the var i slty town were so crowded that many visitors could not secure rooms. These i ; same conditions exist when the game is i played in Corvallis. 1 . During the recent Eugene game more ' ; than 3000 spectators suffered the diseom- titure or standing up ior neany mree hours, the seating accommodations being ' altogether inadequate. There is no deny ' Ing the fact that the game has outgrown ' ' 4Ua MnllAnn tABin. nnrl hosiul linnn hi . consideration, it ought to be moved. Another argument In favor of Portland ! is the neutral field which would afford a fair chance and no favors for either ' team, and eliminate the aftermath of ; : bickering that has followed many of the " '. Oregon-O. A. C. games, i ', It is also argued by friends of the ' Portland movement that this game is al ; . ways the big event of the season in the Northwest, and that it should be played where the greatest number of people can 1 BrC 11. JIIBl. Ui5 lUllfi HO IHD (iamb played in the small college towns it will ' be of limited importance and will not re ceive tho consideration which it should i ' be accorded. ; Portland is the metropolis or Oregon, ' ' and Portland pays a large share of the taxes that go to support the two state schools. Surely, it is not unreasonable , for Portland to ask for this game, es . peeially as college football is growing more popular here each year. The trans portation prohlcm from Eugene and Cor- vallis to Portland would not be a serious 1 nnc, for the Southern Pacltic Company -has already 6ffcred exceptionally low excursion rates from both towns. These . excursion rates would enable the poorest ' students of both institutions to see the Riime, which would also be within easy rrach of many alumni and old students who reside here. would be a great money-maker and would put into the treasury of the athletic as- soeiatlons of both institutions enough money to carry on all branches of ath letics successfully. College baseball, track Athletics, oratory, debate, glee clubs, etc.. seldom pay expenses, and usually depend upon tho football surplus to carry them through. From a business standpoint, therefore. It would seem that the game ' -ought to come here. Students Want Campus Game. A majority of tho university students want the gamo to remain on the campus. They aro honestly and sincerely opposed to its removal. They recognize the game as tho big evert of the season, and they want to see it kept within easy access to ; ', ride from Eugene to Corvallis. and the ' railroad fare is only one-third as great as the fare to Portland. The change to .' Portland, so say the university students, would put a damper upon college spirit. ; would foster commercialism and pave tne way for gambling, drinking and acts of . rowdyism. They argue that amicable relations be tween the two schools are more likely to rxist when one body of students are hosts ; ind the others are guests than where both are flocking in large numbers to a 1 . neutral ground. They believe that the ftudents of one institution should famil- iarize themselves with the work of the - other, and that this result can best be - accomplished by friendly visits at the : time or Dig atmeuc events. In this connection it might be well to note that the Oregon students believe . thai all athletic contests should be on ; the campus of one of the contesting ' teams. They do not wish to continue the Oregon-Idaho game in Portland, and have arranged to play it alternately in Moscow ; and Eugene during the next two seasons. Portland the Proper Place. It is the hope of the writer that the '. big game will be played here, not only this year, but annually hereafter. The arguments against the Portland arrange- ment are appreciated, but they do not re fute the stronger arguments in favor of the change. The Oregon-O. A. C. game of 1907 was ! ' the greatest event of the Northwest sea ; son. This year's game promises to be ' equally as good. "With its new grand- stand, seating more than 4000 people, Multnomah Field would be an ideal place i for such a game. MAGNATES EASILY BUXCOED ;;Or $170,pOO Worth or Ballplayers ; Only $10,000 'Worth Make Good. "If I could only look into a ball-play-' er' heart when I make up my mind to ; pay good money for him," says Presl- dent Barney Dreyfuss, of the Pittsburg elub. "In the last eight years I have ''xpended about I1TO.O0O for ball players, t ' only about 10,0C0 wortl of them out to be the real thing. am not the only magnate that has been stung in that manner, either. A good friend of mine in Cincinnati bought lemons by the crate under the impression that they were luscious peaches. I'm I willing to bet that he didn't come off any better than I did. "And there is a feature that is worse even than that. If an owner pays a lot of money for a player, and then finds out he is no good he doesn't feel so very bad. But if he turns that player over to some other club, and a wily manager waves his wand over him and converts hint into the real luscious fruit, oh, what a headache! "But we'll keep right on doing that very thing as long as we stay in base ball. A player may look pretty good before he faces the big -league batters, but his heart may fail him at the psychological moment, and away blows a bunch of pretty greenbacks. "I think the baseball magnate is the biggest greengoods man on earth. But he doesn't bunco anybody but himself." MAKES TWO RUNS OX HOMER Umpire Allows Hixon to Score Twice on Long Hit, In Game. The Toledo team is to have the pitcher this season who struck out 23 men one day last Summer, and who then hit a ball so far that he ran around the bases twice, making two tallies and winning tho game. Tho umpire decided that, as the ball had not been recovered in time to prevent the pitcher from going twice around, he was entitled to two rune. The gentleman referred to is I M. Hixon, a big right-hander, who twirled in the Waterloo (Ohio) independent team. He is a schoolteacher in the Winter time, but they say he has speed some thing like that of young Walter Johnson, the Idaho phenom whom Joe Cantillon usberVd into the American League last Summet. Hixon pitched all the games for his club, as they had no other pitcher. One day when playing the rival nine his team went to pieces in the first inning and showed it could not field any kind of ball. Hixon buckled up and struck out all but five of the men who were retired that day. It was after perform ing this stunt that he hit out the double home run. Chicago Record-Herald. Many Entries for Bench Show. NEW YORK, Jan. 25. Officials of the Westminster Kennel Club annouace heav ier entries than ever for the annual bench show to be held in Madison Square Gar den, February 11 to 14. The number of exhibitors, it is stkted, will be the largest on record.. Entries from Europe are on their way across the ocean and will be accepted as will domestic entries bearing a postmark not later than January 23. CHIT-CHAT OF THE BY WILL G. MAC RAE. ONCE more the forward pass is in danger of undergoing an operation. The skilled doctors of the football rules will shortly hold consultation over the patient. Governor Hughes ' is backing the fight against racing in New York state. This will certainly endear him to a lot of folks in and around Portland who ere Against the bang tail game. There is satisfac tion in knowing, however, that the Ore gon delegation to the national conven tion won't be delivered to Hughes. Mysterious Billy Smith, refused to box at the Jack Hill benefit, unless Yost wore a sweater. Smith was afraid there was a Anthony Comstock in the audience who would object to looking at nude living pictures. At least that is what the mysterious one said. Now that amatuer boxing lias "taken" in Portland it will not be long before a lot of clever youngsters will be de DAM KELLY WHO p .EAST TO TOE THE MARK MISTAKES BY HORSEMEN BA1 JUDGMENT IS SOMETIMES SHOWN BY KEENEST. Virginian Tells Story of How Billy Garth One Time Lost Golden Opportunity. It may fairly be presumed that Billy Gat th, the keenest of the modern school of Virginia horsemen, knows as much about horso trading as anybody. Ho was talking about some of the queer phases of horse dickering the other night. "There are pretty nigh as many hard luck stories in horse trading as there are in horse racing,'' he said. "The worst of it is that a horseman will often involuntarily hand himself a hard paste. I've done that myself, not once, but often. "Once I had a mare shifty third rate sprinter, but a right good proposi tion for the minor circuits that a well-to-do man from my state who wanted to get into racing had his eye on. He came along to the farm early in the Spring, before the racing season had begun, to look the mare over. 'I hadn't taken her up yet, but her record for the previous season wasn't So bad. I had the mare saddled and brought out, with a coon boy astride, for a jog. y " 'Perfectly sound, is she?" the man who wanted to get into racing asked me. as the mare trudged around the grounds. - " 'As a new flute,' I said. 'Never walked a lame step in her life, and eats like a hired man. Sound as a taw agate.' ' " 'What are you asking for the mare?" he asked me. " 'Two thousand flat, and not the price of a cigarette under that,' I said. " 'Give you fifteen hundred right there where you stand," he said, pro ducing his roll and beginning to strip off yellows. " "Couldn't think of It,' I said. 'Might as well put your money back in your clothes. The first three purses the mare hauls down this season will give me fifteen hundred, and she'll still be' mine. If she doesn't traipse away with nine or ten purses this year I'll eat her." "He wont right ahead counting out hundred-dollar bills. Finally he had got fifteen of the hundreds sorted out and he put the rest of his wad away. " 'Here's your fifteen hundred, BUI.' he said, trying to hand me the money. 'I'll send one of my boys over for her. She's mine as she stands-, eh? Here, SPORTING WORLD veloped. While It is necessary to develop the boxers, there is also a. chance to edu cate the fight fan. He must be brought to realize that a boxing bout is not a finished fight and must be satisfied with a decision on points and not by a knock out. Jim B., we can't tell you what will become of Russ Hall, should the North west Lieague decide to drop Butte. Mana ger McCredie said the other day he was not looking for a shortstop. - ' This is the kind of weather that makes the baseball fan stand around and wish it was time to play balL It is also the time of the season when the player wish es he was on the pay rolL When it comes to the advertising Kid, we have to slip emblem to Dr. Roller, of Seattle. When tooth carpentering is at a low ebb in Seattle, the doctor breaks Into the wrestling game. He says his recent match with Farmer Burns was on the square. All right Doctor, we believe you now, but if you repeat it, don't blame us if we get a bit suspicious. m 1 take this money. I'm tired holding It. You can tram her for me yourself. But she's my mare from this minute,' and he tried lo slip the roll into my coat pocket. "I've got to own up to it. but I'm as pigheaded as any Yankee., And this looked too good. If he'd give fifteen hundred, why, he'd soon do better than that. "'You, Mose!' I yelled out to tho coon boy n the mare, making a funnel of my hands, 'take that mare back to the shed!" "That move, of course, you see, was only to show my friend that I meant it thought I didn't, and fifteen hundred was more than right for tho mare and to gouge my price out of him. "Well, when I yelled that way at the dlnge boy, he wheeled the mare sud denly, and her head knocked against a projecting branch of a peach tree that was covered with blossoms. A great shower of the blossoms fluttered down upon the mare's head, scaring her. "She jumped like a tomcat filled with birdshot. Then she got her teeth down on the bit and hopped for It. "Gentlemen, the way that mare plowed up my tarm! The-crazy coon boy dropped the reins and hung on around her neck. Then, panic hitting him as she made straight for a high board fence, he slid off backward. "The mare, crazy with fear of those fool peach blossoms, tried to take, the fence, head down. But she'd never been asked to do anything over the sticks. Anyhow, this board fence was seven feet high. "She plunged at it, hit the top scan tling with her forelegs, and fell back, both of those forelegs broken. I had to shoot her on the spot. For being pigheaded, like a Yank, I was out a nice mare and $1300. I could have saved the $1500 anyhow, by letting it remain in my pocket when my friend had slipped the bills In there, and the mare's loss would have been his, for that's the. way it's done in borse trad ing bargain strike, bargain stick." New York Sun. HE DID XOT LOOK GENEROUS Compliment of Yobng Woman Dis pleases Hunter Hill. Hunter Hill, ,who rjlayed third base fot Washington a few years back, was not noted for any Apollo-like beauty ot countenance, and, although he was in the main a good natured player, his ap pearance when at the bat was fierce, to say the least. He was one of the best sacrifice hitters then in the big league, and for that reason he was generally called upon to make a sacrifice hit when ever it came to his turn to wield the wiU low. One day when Hunter was at the bat, with that grim look of determination overspreading his expressive . if not handsome countenance. Jack Thoney, who was then playing on the Washing ton club, was seated in the grand stand with a young woman, having laid off from play this particular afternoon. Barry McCormick was on first base, and, of course it was up to Hunter to sacri fice, and so Thoney told his friend. "But what does sacrifice mean?" the fair fan inquired, with a bewildered look. "It means," Jack explained, "that Hill there at the bat will allow himself to be put out on going to first so that McCor mick can reach second base." 'Dear me,': the young woman ex claimed, "from Mr. Hill's appearance you- wouldn't think that he would be so generous and kind-hearted, would you?'" Thoney told Hunter about it that night down at the hotel, and Hunter didn't laugh himself into hysterics over it all at once, although the other members of the club enjoyed the story hugely. Washington Star. Stanford to Try for Distances. STANFORD 'UNIVERSITY, Palo Alto, Cal., Jan. 25,S tan ford will enter a team of distance runners In the Olympic Club two-mile race in Golden Gate Park on Washington's birthday. WRESTLERS POOR BOXERS NEVER GREAT IN RING, SAYS FRANK GOTCH. Champion Declares Matmen Arc . Too Cautious Because of Habits Acquired While Training. Frank Gotch, the champion catch-as. catch-can wrestler, has discovered why a wrestler cannot succeed as a boxer. "Some people marvel at my . desire to get into the fight game," he says. "They do not realize that the, wres tling game is far harder, far more cruel than the boxing. Some wrestlers on the mat suffer indescribable pain from certain holds. The boxer suffers little real pain. A well-directed blow to the jaw and he is in dreamland. He never knew what hit him. "I see no reason why I couldn't make good in boxing. I am as fast and shifty on my feet as any of them, and I surely am as strong. There is but one drawback. "Here's the only difference between a fighter and a wrestler. The mat man pulls away; the fighter goes for ward. See what I mean? Take, for instance yourself. When your oppo nent grabs hold of your wrist you pull back. You resist him. You do not go forward. Take a fellow, now, who has wrestled as long as I have. Wres tling has become a second nature to i me. "I put on the gloves, we'll say, and deliver a punch. Instinctively I draw back before hitting. The blow loses its force and makes me look slow. The fighter whips one loose and never hesi tates. If I could overcome that one weakness I would gladly tackle some of the big fellows. "I am afraid to go too far because it might mar my work as a wrestler, as I still have my ambition to meet Hackenschmidt. No man can be a No Varicocele HrdroceJe Atrophy. Nervous Debility. Waatinr - V leers Hlood Dlsor4rs. . Pimples Kcxema Bladder Ailments Kidney Ailments. Prostate Ailments $5. TO $30' VAKICOCEXK , Cured. No pain. The enlarged veins . are due to mumps, bicycle or horseback riding, disease, etc. In time it weak ens a man mentally as well as physically. We will cure you for life, or make no- charge. Write If ' HOURS 9 A. M. to 5 P. M.; Evenings. 1 to 8:30: Sundays. 9 A. M. to 13 Noon. ST. LOUIS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL DISPENSARY CORNER SECOND AND YAMH1JLI. STREETS. PORTLAND. OREGON C0AC tfW MURPHK iVHO HAS BE f) SiCKS IN CALIFORNIA great wrestler and a great fighter at the same time. "Yes, but I guess I'll have to go to England to get the match with Hack. He won't come here. I don't mean to say he's afraid of me. He's a mighty good man. But he is getting a thou sand and more a week in the concert halls of Europe, and he would be fool ish to come all the way over here when he can make more there. I'm not knocking anybody's game. I just think I can beat Hack, but because I think so doesn't mean that he should chase oyer here to meet me. I know- I threw Tom Jenkins as easily as he did. "The Russian is a wonderful man physically. He is as handsome a speci men as I have ever looked at. He awes his opponent by his size and build. But I don't call him a finished wrestler. I feel sure I can beat him. I'm going to try; anyway." 'STARCH BALIi" THE LATEST Pitcher Manuel 'Working on Cum to Relegate the "Spitter." "Moxle" Manuel, the Southern League recruit for the Chicago White Sox, has received his contract from President Comiskey and expects to answer to the call for the first practice. Manuel was a. star in Southern company last year. He is practicing a new curve which he expects to launch on American League hitters. He uses it with the aid of starch mixed with saliva. Manuel's ex perience with the starch shows that it is an improvement on the ordinary "spitters." Manuel says it is possible to pitch the "starch ball" with more of a quick dart than a curve. He expects to perfect it with the aid of Ed Walsh, and says they have talked of it on for mer occasions and agree it will eventu ally succeed the ordinary "spit ball."-. Memphis Appeal. If Baoy Is Cc-tlux Teeth B sui and that old wall-tried remedy, Mrs. WlniloWi Soothing Syrup, tor chlldraa teethlnc. Zt aootbec tha cblld. aoftona tfc luni, ailara pain, oollo and diarrhofta. Custom-made choes at foctory cost at Rosenthal's house-cleaning sale. A Word of Advice Pay Unless Cured Consultation Free We Are the Leading Specialists WEAKNESS CURED. We are taking' broken-down wrecks of humanity every day and fixing them up as good as any man of their years. We don't care what has. caused the trouble, nor who has failed to cure them. We can cure them and make them better and stronger than they ever hoped to be. Just because some other specialist has failed to cure you Is no- reason why we should fail. Our treatment for MEN'S WEAKNESSES and other diseases is as different from other spe cialists' manner of treatment as day is from night. Permanent and lasting cures of all diseases of men. We have the most perfectly equipped offices in the West. you cannot call. All correspondence eacreaiy Although Sir Thomas Is Ready to Spend Fortune No European Builder Can Compete With Captain Herreshoff. Sir Thomas Lipton's announcement that he could not challenge again for the America's cup under the old conditions was a matter of little moment to many But it really means that the famous old "mug" the greatest of all sporting tro phies Is to remain uncontested for. It seems doomed to become a relic, says the New York World. The expressed inability of Sir Thomas to challenge under the rules governing races for the cup was an admission that no yacht designer of note in the British domains will undertake to compete with Captain Nat Herreshoff.. And Sir Thomas emphasized that point by adding that the size of competing yachts was no object to him. He would order a 90-footer as quickly as anything else, but no one will build one. That sounds like an overdrawn state ment, but one must take into considera tion the fact that when a designer draws the lines of an America's cup boat he puts his all his foremost skill and his reputation into the model. William Fife, it will bo remembered, created tho first Shamrock for Sir Thomas, and the Co lumbia beat her by ten minutes and eight seconds in the first race, or more than 20 seconds a mile. In the second race the Shamrock lost her topmast and with drew. Tn the third race the Columbia won by six minutes and 34 seconds. The late George L. Watson was then called upon to design the Shamrock II., and many American yachtsmen today believe she was a better boat than the Columbia. On one occasion the Lipton boat finished two seconds ahead, but lost the race, as she had to allow the Co lumbia 13 seconds. Shamrock III. Settled Question. Fife "then took up the work again, this time modelling the Shamrock III. Tier career, which wound up on September 3, 1fKi3. with the Reliance distancing her in 'a 15-mile thrash to windward and return, settled the question In the minds of British designers as to whether a yacht built with a 90-foot waterllne and no other restrictions could be sent over here and win the cup. Fife has persistently refused to design another- such ' boat. Alfred Mylus. who had been successful In British waters with smaller boats, was talked of as one who might attempt" to turn out a victorious craft, but he soon took the same view Kife did. Both, how ever, were and are still willing to design boats under the present American or the European measurements. There was some doubt as to whether Fife would accept any kind of an order again from Sir Thomas, but he now has under construction a small yacht for htm to race. Sir Thomas was first reported to be considering asking the New York Yacht Club again if they would change the cup rules, and that he should persist in talk ing about challenging under new condi tions caused surprise among those yachts men who heard of the statement attribut ed to him. It kindled a feeling in certain quarters that he is trying to benefit in pocket by keeping his name linked with the trophy. Sir Thomas well knows un der what conditions he can arrange a race, as he forced the New York Yacht Club in make those conditions, and thpv were sent to him. New Rules Talk Kept Up. Even long before the Shamrock. HI was beaten by the Reliance, Sir Thomas talked about new rules to govern the con tests and has kept it up. When he sent a challenge last Fall for a race with a 6S-footer under the present measurement rule, the New York Club decided to settle once for all the question of conditions. The new rule had been found wanting, and as custodian of the greatest interna tional cup the club did not deem it ad visable to apply the rule to races for that prize. Furthermore, it was the gen eral opinion that the cup was wortn building 90-footers to race for. At a meeting of the club called for the purpose it was voted that competing yachts shall be 90-footers In other words, the fastest boats, 90 feet long on the surface of the water that can be built and that the question of time al lowance (which would take into consid eration the yachts' overhang, or water line lengths subtracted by their deck lengths) should be settled by argument. These conditions were mailed to Sir Thomas along with a letter declining his challenge. He had been officially notified before that negotiations would not be en tered Into until a formal challenge had been received. WHY KOT TREAT with reputable specialists ot known worth and skill, rather than1 waste your time -with would-be specialists of no skill or ability. Is it not better to treat with a med ical institute composed of men scien tifically trained to cure and who are men of standing , and ability than to treat with self-styled, so-called spe cialists of limited experience, whose vaunted cures are no cures at all? Do not be fooled into paying a big fee for surgical procedure that does not cure. We are the leading special ists In Portland and our cures aro thorough and permanent. Talk with us about your ailment and a personal Interview will convince you that we know our business. connaenuai.