THE SUNDAY OREGONIAX, PORTLAND, MAY- S. 1908. Portland Automobile Road Races Attract Attention Throughout United States . Course Is Laid Through Rolling Country East of Portland and Is Ideal.; Being Ifast With Number of Sharp Turns to Give Spice of Danger. '-' . " , Many Entries from Eastern Cities , ' ' ' . ... " .... .. You've Always Said: "If the Cadillac Company would only build a big car as good as its little car they would have - the whole . world beaten." ' c . V XSV J TV&S Slf A S7-T:P ZXj4Z7 AC9? WZ- 'S3 JT" BY W. J. PETRAIN". PORTLAND'S 100-mile automobile road race to be held here on June 4. of the Rose Carnival la., attracting widespread attention amonsc the racera and automo bile dealers throughout the United States. Scarcely a day passes but some . utw entry or prospective entry is re- celved by the Portland Automobile Club, ' under whose auspices the event is to take ,- place, and the correspondents are anxious ' to be informed of the conditions and .: rules governing the contest. Some of '; the prospective entrants are not satis- fled to leave the matter to the malls and are either in the city at present or '.' on their way here to investigate for themselves. Among the out-of-town entries now on ; the ground Is F. Fatberth, who will race ;' the Oldsmobile car in the lou-mile event, and Friday morning he went over the course with one of the local drivers for the purpose of looking over the route. '. On his return to the city he was en ' thusiastlc In his praise of the route se .lacted,, and declared that It was a much .'.better road than is the Briarcliffe course, over which the recent races were run In New York state. Falberth was espe cially pleased with the splendid sc-mile straightaway from Merrill's Twelve-Mile House to Russellvllle, which he says is one of Wie best pieces of macadamized roadway in the United States. The opinion of this Eastern expert is voiced by most of the local drivers, and the Portland Automobile . Club and -the 'Rose Festival Association are congratu lating themselves on arranging for such ia. gigantic attraction for the festival week. " The start of the racers will be made at -a point on the Base Line Road a little .east of Russellvllle and . the course runs jwest to where the Russellvllle road in tersects, and turning south on that thor oughfare, will run over to the Section "Line Road, and thence east to Greshara, 'and from that point north to the Base JJne, thence west to the starting point .and continuing, the entries will make -the circuit seven times In- order to com plete the 100 miles. The route "at present possesses three exceedingly dangerous points, but before ,the races are run the county officials .and the promoters of the race, working In conjunction, will have alleviated most nf the danger by widening and ballasting Hho poorly equipped ; portions of the course. The first .danger point is located at what Is known as the "S," just east of 'the Gresham hill on the Section Line JRoad, and in making the double turn is where the drivers will be called upon to ,-exert all their skill and Judgment. In order to round the two sudden turns safely the driver will have to hug 'the 'north fence at the first one and then "shoot directly for the opposite fence t,at the second curve. . From that point it is but a short distance to where another bad corner ts found. This is at Rigler's corner, 'where the course rounds fromthe Sec tion Line Into tho Gresham road and , extends from there to Cleveland's ranch. hardly half a mile distant, i where another turn is met, and this "lattpr turn leads Into a short stretch to the dangerous turning point at the .gravel pit. This pit Is at a point on the ..Gresham road where the second turn .leaves from the south to the Twelve .Mlla House. Charles- Cleveland, the "owner of the property at that point, ' has agreed to make a cut of 12 feet I'lnto the bank on the southeast corner of the turn, thereby widening the i .roadway. If the embankment on the 'west side of the road -here can be bal lasted and a temporary earthen- wall : 'erected, the danger of driving over Into tthe pit will be greatly alleviated. Along the route are any number of .-.vantage points whereby the spectators -will be afforded an opportunity of wit ' nessing the races. .The best ones are "located at Gresham and vicinity, for, 'from the heights near tht place a view of Beveral miles of the winding roadway is to be had.' From Gresham iHUl the best view is to be had of the l"windlnsr Bortion of the road known as the dangerous b, ana from tnai ..nlTt the tour of the autos an the way - to the gravel pit is plainly visible. The grandstand to ba erected wui be cap m iiiiujiiiiimi mi ijwiwiawwiwiMiwiiwwiwtpiiwwiK juh i.ijii .n-ii..u..iiwnpimni.jH,njwiii.!ini jnjma nitij mmwi j. . : 'I J r7oT.' TM1 T-C?SS-S Si&C INDICATED BYMSTaz:K.5 -4vs$t. ; il : : ' : ' 1 g. ( "-- able of accommodating 50U0 people and will be situated on the Base Line road one and one-half miles from the turn at the Twelve-Mile House, and Catlin's Field, directly across the road, will he thrown open to the spectators who at tend the races In automobiles, car riages and other vehicles. A view of six miles of straightaway road Is to be had from this point. The entire course will be policed by the Third Regiment, O. N. G under the command of Adjutant-General W. E. Flnzer, and the militiamen will keep all persons off the track during the- time the racing machines are in competition. ' " Among the' entries likely to partici pate in these races are three cars from Detroit, Mich.; two from Toledo, O.; two from Buffalo, two from Salt Lake City, three - from Denver, four from Los Angeles, three from San Francisco, three from Seattle, .one from Spokane and one from Omaha. The Kastern cars will be driven by experts who fiave participated in the Briarcliffe and Vanderbilt races, and several who have raced cars at Cleveland and at Ormonde Beach. Among the local celebrants are Howard M. Covey, William D. Wal lace, R. D. Inman; Will F. Lipman, Billy Eastman, Floyd Cook. George Ainslie, M. W. Dickinson and several www., artf-or .W"' ii.'.v,':.-;. vWi-'-WM'ia-v :-:-tA-'iv.M;.v.- ;'v.v.,; .Jifl'. yAw..4v:iv jw.'-,.'P'i..A::'..." .v.A.' :.. -iv..- ..-r-W A - "7"- V ,.ir -. . . others who will probably enter cars in either the . century or half-century events. , . M. W. Dickinson, the genial manager of the Oregon Hotel, and one of the most enthusiastic motorists in Port land, will have a brand new car on the ground during the coming week. Lucky Dick, as his friends style him, delights in sending his .car as: fast as possible, and is rated as one of the best drivers among the private owners of automobiles in this city. . . ' 1 George Ainslie, one of the really new devotees -of the sport, has joined the ranks of. the speed marvels, ana pos sesses a high-power machine of well known capabilities .'and delights' in hustling some at every opportunity. Fred Leinenweber Is". another new member of the autoing fraternity, and .now takes, a keen delight in careering around in his handsome new runabout. Howard if. Covey will be represented in the road races with four cars of different makes and will drive two of the cars, one in the 60 and the other in the century. The makes are the Cadil lac. Locomobile, Pierce-Arrow and Corbln. m " - I Chit-Chat of Sporting I I World t BT Willi. G. MAC BAB. DID your dog win a prize? . If be didn't, get a better dog for the next kennel show. : An Illinois sport rolled a barrel of water two miles and won as a wager a barrel of whisky. We know lots of peo ple who would travel twice the distance in quest of the same kind of a trophy- A ballplayer's wife got tired of having her husband coming home drunk, so she got soused as an object lesson. Her husband proceeded to get a divorce, all of which goes to show that even some ballplayers are without the sense of humor. - - What lias become of that noise about a "runaway race" that was heard around the' smoke joints? Even the San Fran cisco papers have reached the conclusion that Portland "Must be reckoned with." Mug.gsy McGraw has engaged in his iT J 1 i?2 : -'c'v-''m.tiiwmtranVii first fistic encounter of the season. He stopped a couple of wallops shoved in his direction by Dan McGann, ex captain of the New York Giants. Big Bill Lange, once a Chicago star and Jim McDonald, the old Coast League ump, are sweet on the Portland team. Manager McCredie has put the lid on poker playing. Here is a part of a speech he delivered the other day: "You fellows have got to cut out this poker playing. No more on this club, and if I catch you monkeying with the cards I will slap a fine on you. You lose your money and because-1 won't stake you you get sore and disgruntled. You play late at nights and you don't get your natural leep. I don't care if I don't have two players left on the club, poker must stop." Packy McFarland, who whipped Jim my Britt into retirement, is going to quit the ring. He has an offer as cattle buyer at the Chicago stockyards. Tommy Sheehan, one of Mique Fish er's former stars, is playing a great game at third for Brooklyn. He is a fixture in the big bushes now. In 1870 the population of Manltoha a 17.000; today it is 400,000. Model G, Four Cylinder, 25-H. P. Oil Lamps Model H, Four Cylinder, 30-H. P. Lamps and 9 You realized when you said that, that the supe riority of the little Cadil lac lay in its enormous strength, its elemental simplicity and its perfect standardization. 5 You knew the little Cadil lac had the pulling power of a pack-horse and the speed of a high-bred racar; and you wondered if these qualities wrould be ... emphasized in' proportion if the cylinders were mul tiplied. 9 "Well, while you were "wondering," the Cadil lac Company was building the ideal Cadillac you had in your mind a magnifi cent high-powered car in which the line qualities of the smaller ear are repro duced on a larger scale. 9 Today one-third the out put of this great plant con sists of these uperb 4-cyl-inder Cadillacs, and their owners are . saying pre cisely the same things about them that 16,000 ' , owners say of the smaller car. Cadillac Motor Car Co., Detroit, Mich,, u.s. a. Members Association Automobile Manufacturers. COVEY MOTOR GAR GO SIXTEENTH AND ALDER STREETS, PORTLAND. MANY FDR BOXING Prominent Men Approve of Ciub Tournament. PARTICIPANTS NOT INJURED Club Management Not Responsible for Donntoun Betting Boxing Events Are Arranged In' San Francisco During . Festival. BY W. J. PBTRAIX. The recent boxing and wrestling tourna ment of the Multnomah Club has un loosened the flood-gates of criticism. At the ringside during the three-night box ing and wrestling carnival were a large percentage of Portland's most prominent citizens; men whose integrity has never been questioned, and yet none of these have come forward to complain that the bouts were brutal or in any sense danger ous. Many of those present are the fath ers of boys who frequently come home with the marks of combat, and it is a poor parent in such an event who would censure his offspring for defending him self at the expense of a discolored optic or a swollen nose against the assault of another lad. The youth of today needs athletic training and the best and most productive exercise is that of self-defense. It is this principle that the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club adopts, and in the effort to carry out its theory, affords iU younger, and for that matter, older members, an opportunity of learn ing the manly art, A good, healthy boy, full of life and action. Is the boy who espouses the boxing or wrestling game at the Club, or any other place, and many of Portland's most prominent cit izens have had their little mills at the Club durine their younger days, and any of them will tell you today that they are! better, stronger and healthier men for the opportunity afforded them by the ath letic training of their youth. One especial feature of the boxing con tests at the Multnomah Club was the careful attention ' given the contestants by Referee Jack Grant, who scanned the features of each boxer after he had re ceived a hard blow, and at the first sign of distress or weakness the referee in terfered. A great deal of the adverse criticism of the bouts was relative to the contest between Niecken, of Multnomah, and Speck, of Seattle, which took place on the opening nisht. Niecken received a cut over the eye In the second round, and as usual in cases where the blood is heated by exercise, he bled profusely, but Touring Car, $2000, Including Three and Horn. Touring Car, Including Thres Oil Horn, $2500. 9 This 4-cylinder car was really live 3-ears in the process of building,' be cause it crystallized the invaluable exjrienee of these five years in perfect ing the standardization of: the little car and repre sents the highest mechani- ' cal possibilities of a huge plant which builds the largest line of separate .models made in any one factory in the world. .9 It represents the new era in automobile building which demands a car so strong, and so perfectly synchronized in every part that it will last, not one season, but two, three, four and five. 9 These long-lived qualities have been realized in the $2000 4-cylinder 2o-H. P. and the $2500 4-cylinder 30-11. P. cars, and they possess in a superlative degree all the rugged qualities of the smaller car. 9 "We urge 3011 to verify these statements by per sonal investigation, com . parison and demonstra tion. the cut was simply a scratch and harmed the. youngster not at all, but Mayor Lane's official guardians of the law, knowing nothing of actual boxing condi tions, thought the boy was being jnal treated and were about to interfere when the bout came to a close. Niecken was unharmed, and" while defeated in the match, it was not due to the cut over the eye, but to hla physical condition before entering the ring. The boy was over trlaned and weak on that account; other wise he would have made a much better showing. The day following the alleged bloody fight he was on the street look ing as though he had never engaged in a contest with padded gloves in his life, for there was not a mark to show for his experience of the night before. - As to the bets wagered on the con tests, if there were bets made at the' ringside, they were wagered without the knowledge or consent of the club offi cials, and why they should be censured for something over which they have no control is an injustice. It is true that considerable money changed hands on one of the bouts, but this was practically all wagered down town before the night's programme was inaugurated. And it might be mentioned, incidentally, that about ten times that amount won or lost during the entire three-day tournament changed hands at recent elections. The Olympic Club, of San 'Francisco, which was represented at the recent Multnomah Club tournament, will short ly hold a boxing and wrestling carnival at San Francisco. These contests will take place during fleet week at the Bay City, and will be open for entries from all parts of the country. The dates of the bout are May 11, 13 and 15; the first night's programme to be held at the Au ditorium rink, and the second two at Dreamland Pavilion. - Many Portlanders who are going to San Francisco to wit ness the arrival of Admiral Kvans and his ships will be afforded an opportunity of witnessing these bouts. During the stay of the Atlantic fleet at San Francisco, Jimmy Coffroth. the San Francisco light promoter, is anticipating reaping a harvest, for he has billed the two best boxing attractions of the day for May 9 and May 16. Next Saturday Stanley Ketchel, the shining light among the new stars in fl-stiana, will meet Ja( k ("Twin") Sullivan in a 35-round bout. Ketchel has participated in 4i rini; bat tles and has wonvery one of them by a knockout, while his. opponent has defeated Tommy Burns. Jack O'Brien, Mike Schreck, Hugo Kelly and Bill Squires, and Is rated as one of the most dangerous men in the ring, either at the middle or heavyweight divisions. On the following Saturday, May 16, Battling Nelson is scheduled to hook up with his old-time rival, Rudolph Unholz, the fighting Boer, who gave Nelson a hard battle at Los Angeles several months ago. Baseball Game This Morning. The Wabash Independents "and the Spantons will meet in their first con test for the city championship on the Vaughn-street grounds this morning. Both teams are in fine condition and a close and exciting game is expected. Cabbages in Cuba -row to such lze that a single, head often weighs 20 pounds.