TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, FORTLAXP, AUGUST 23, 1903. VfENT UNGEI AKER AUTOMOBIL r TUB H H ' -m-T T . T 1 ANNO EB And The Everett-Metzgeir-Flanders Company, o E Detroit, Michigan, Just Jomea Issues to Produce and Market the First Popular Priced Automobile m Which Low Cos Has Been Accomplished Solely by Improved Manufacturing Methods Without Sacrifice of Quality. Wycoononpoi We axe taMng orders for this oar for October deliveries subject to the same liberal reatment -rdour ffi a Kbaker ta a mosSfa.tory manner. Oar new garage t owner wnatneuunKa oi ms cr ,., .,. wr ,, arrival of the car in Portland. In other words, if the car is We will make deliveries in turn as the orders are taken ana wm " "a TetaT deposit money. . UUU CLAJ. tliaU W V ipi "vaaw ii w - ""- i ... ... mi i. iii i iiii i. i.i.i l V .' "J, . "TTTTTnTTTT'" J i mmmmmmmmm Specifications in Brief MOTOR Four vertical cylinders cast in pairs developing a liberal 30-H. P. All valves mechanically operated, three bearing drop-forged special steel crank shaft, Splash lubrication. Oil reservoir cast integral, with aluminum crank case. DOUBLE IGNITION SYSTEM, including magneto. Quadruple coil, -commutator and battery, magneto being part of standard equipment. COOLING by thermo-syphon system. No pump. BELT-DRIVEN FAN, mounted on engine with eccentric belt adjustment. Especiallv designed E. M. F. FLOAT FEED SINGLE-JET CARBURETOR. EXPANDING RING CLUTCH, leather faced, contained in fly wheel. TRANSMISSION Selective type of sliding gear, gear case cast integral, with differential housing, in rear axle. Unit power transmission system, so generally ap proved by designing engineers, and usually conceded to be of too expensive a design to apply to a moderate priced car. SPEEDS Three forward and one reverse. Direct on third. Gear reduction, standard 34 to 1, special 3 to 1 and 4 to 1. Speed of car, 50 miles per hour down to 4 miles per hour on high. ...,: : ;.,m:.. - ... . f . J - ' A, f'1L f 1 -1 Specifications in Brief r ThTbesTii'rS the world "in "its class DELIVERED IN PORTLAND with three oil lamps, two gas lamps, horn and generator, for $140O.lMJ. ORDER ON APPROVAL NOW BEAR AXLE Live, semi-floating type of the exclusivo E. M. F. design . FRONT AXLE I-beam, drop forged. STEERING GEAR Irreversible, worm and sector made from special steel, case hardened. WHEELS 12 spokes, artillery type, TIRES Highest grade, standard make, with Universal quick detachable rims, 32 in. by 3V2- j BRAKES Four, all acting on rear hubs. SPRINGS Semi-elliptic front, full-elliptic rear. Extra wide, 2 inches. ....... TYPES OP BODY Touring car, 5-passcnger, roomy ton- neau. Most approved straight-line type. Handsomely finished. RUNABOUT Standard type. ROADSTER Single or double rumble, as ordered. DEMI-TONNEAU An E. M. F. innovation: A classy 4-pa8senger car, with detachable tonneau, leaving room for trunks and touring outfit. WHEEL BASE 106 inches. TREAD Standard, 56V2 inches. WEIGHT OF CAR 1800 pounds. GASOLINE CAPACITY 15 gallons. OIL 1 gallon. STUDE BARER-BRO 330-336 EAST MORRISON STREET CO., : I HAND CRISIS IS AT Portland to Make Supreme Ef fort for First Place. WILL OPEN WITH OAKLAND Fire Straight Weeks on Local Dia mond Will Probably Determine Beavers' Chances for Reach ing Top of Ladder. BT W. J. PETRA1N. Next Tuesday afternoon. on the Vaughn-Btreet grounds, the crucial series of the baseball season of 1908 will be Inaugurated by the Portland ball-toseers with the Oakland club as the opposing faction. On that day a series of five straight weeks on the home lot will be started by the McCredle troupe, and at its con clusion all doubt of Portland's chances of winning or losing the pennant will have been dispelled. It is this series during which Portland will meet Los Angeles and Oakland, while Ban Francisco, the bane of the McCredle clique, comes North but once. After the Inaugural series with Oakland, Portland gets Los Angeles for a two weeks' series, which will include something like 17 games in 13 days. Labor day is the cause of the extension, for, coming as it does, on a Monday, the league has ar ranged for continuous playing by the visitors-, Instead of breaking up the sec ond week by a Journey to the Southland In midweek. The series next week will be marked by a double-header next Sunday, and it is Trobab! that all of the holiday games hereafter will consist of double-headers, because of the large number of post poned games held here last Spring. Th opening affair with Oakland is sure to prove a most Interesting series. This is so not only because Oakland has always managed to make a firm stand against McCredle's contingent, but be cause Manager McCredle will likely in troduce a couple of new slab artists to the hungry home guard. Pitchers Rose and Patrick, the former fcavins already made his inaugural ap pearance before the California fans, will bow before the shouts of the Portland fans for the first time next Tuesday. In a measure the future of the Port land club depends upon the newly ac quired pitching talent, for McCredle will undoubtedly use them to a greater or a lesser extent. In the event that they are worked regularly, because of the many double-headers, it will soon be demonstrated whether they are of the caliber suitable to Pacific Coast League ball. Groom. Garrett. Graney and Kln sella will naturally swing in line for reg ular turns at Blabbing it and will con tinue to be the mainstays in the pitch ing department Just as they have been during the early days of the season, but. In spite of their reliability, the work of the newcomers will have considerable bearing upon the result. The Oakland club, despite its ignomin ious position in the pennant scrap. Is a team that Is at all times dangerous. Just why this team, which always plays so trongly against Portland, has not won many mores games from San Francisco etad Los Angeles la Inexplicable, and Is one of the reasons why the fans have be gun to ask questions as to fair play being existent in the Pacific Coast League with three California towns arrayed against Portland in a tussle for baseball supremacy. Oakland's showing against the other California towns, together with J. Cal Ewing's vainglorious threats of his In tention of abolishing a supposed evil in Portland, which is a glaring affair at San Francisco, has served to create an antipathy toward the present conditions, and Portland demands a change next season. Seattle and Tacoma will have to be included in the Pacific Coast League then or the present popularity enjoyed by the magnates will be on the wane. Mr. Ewlng came to Portland a short time ago and proceeded to lecture the Portland fans about the gambling evil. He threatened all sorts of dire things, but so far has not made good on any of them. Before he starts on Portland, it would be well for him to pay a little at tention to the existing conditions at his own San Francisco baseball park, where the evils of both gambling and drinking are publicly flaunted before the patrons of the game. Portland is freer from the evils he named than is any town in the circuit. In any event, the doings of the presi dent of the league are of but very little interest among the majority of the fans, and as long as the teams play good base ball, baseball that is free from the sem blance of being a fixed proposition, the gates will be liberally patronised and the sport enjoyed to the utmost. Here's hoping Jhat Portland achieves great suc cess during the next five weeks. Asbestos Plant la Burned. NEW YORK, Aug. 22. The lower har bor was lighted up early this morning by a fire which destroyed the asbestos dry ing plant, the largest building of the H. W. Johns-Manville Company, South Brooklyn. Four alarms brought the fire companies within a radius of three miles and a fleet of fireboats. The fire was under control after an hour's fight. The loss is estimated at 2150,000. The burned building was a five-story brick structure at the east end of a row of a half-dozen others. By quick work the firemen saved the palntshop. a three-story wooden af fair, adjoining the burning building. RECOVERS PART OF GEMS Mrs. Seaman Finds $6000 Worth of Jewels In Pawnshop. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 22. Mrs. Bessie Seaman, who was victimized in Reno, Nev., about a year ago by the famous diamond thief, J. Edward Boeck, now serving a sentence in Sing Sing prison, and lost $50,000 worth of Jewelry, yester day recovered a part of her property from local pawnshops and has located others. The amount recovered is about 16000. Mrs. Seaman met Boeck, or Burke, as he called himself then, in this city and later at Reno. At the latter place he en gaged a safety deposit box for her. as she had the Jewels with her, and on the plea that he had valuables of his own to pro tect, asked ,and received the right to share the box. In February Mrs. Seaman went to get her Jewels and found them gone. Boeck was arrested here, but being Identified as a thief, wanted In New York, was extradited. From pawn tickets found on his person, Mrs. Seaman located her property. Loomis Going: to Japan. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 22. Francis B. Loomis, of Ohio, United States Commis sioner to the World's Exposition to be held in Japan in 1912. has arrived in this city on his way to Japan to make pre liminary arrangements for the American exhibit. He expects to return in Novem ber. Mr. Loomis yesterday was the guest of Senator Perkins at a reception in his honor and which was attended by many representative men of the state. 10 RING BATTLES Fight Fans Anxiously Await Bouts in California, ANOTHER NELSON-GANS GO Attell-Moran Encounter Is Also Ob ject of Much Speculation ajid Will Doubtless Be Best Exhibi tion of Two. . BY W. J. PETRAIN. ' One week from tomorrow is Labor day, and two days thereafter occurs what is known as Admission day in California. The bare mention of these dates has no particular significance to the average person, but In the world of sportdom they are looked forward to with more or less anxiety. The primary cause of this anxiety among thousands of our population is the fact that on Labor day Abe Attell and Owen Moran meet at the great game of fisticuffs for the second time, while on Admission day Battling Nelson, the newly-created lightweight champion, and Joe Gans will hook up for the third time. Both battles are attracting widespread attention In sportdom, and the wise ones are already seeking an opportunity to wager all of their spare coin, left from the Summer vacation, upon the chances of their favorite contestants being able to knock out his antagonist. The frequency with which the latter day pugs arrange for return matches al most immediately after the conclusion of a battle hardly gives the losing bettor a chance to accumulate enough money to get "even" on the next fight. But as long as the San Francisco sporting public coughs up its coin at the box office to witness the bouts, the promoters care little whether the "stung" admirers of a loser get their money back or. not. Joe Gans, while he occupied the pedes tal and careered about the country as the unbeatable, succeeded in deluding a large percentage of the betting publlo into the belief that he was the candy article and that nothing short of a thun derbolt could possibly melt him. There fore, when the wily Baltlmorean wilted under the bulldog tactics of the erstwhile despised Battling Nelson several months ago, the same thousands of admirers of the colored lad were badly stung. On this account, the same admirers of the dusky one, who have retained their faith in his prowess, despite the poor showing he made, have decided that the coming melee is the long-expected opportunity of clearing handsomely and thereby re trieving the fortunes lately lost. It does not seem to have occurred to these deluded persons that the erstwhile champion may be really down and out. In fact, were Joe Gans himself to tell them that he hadn't a chance in the world against Nelson, they would prob ably back him Just the same, and it would take a dozen - defeats to convince them that Gans is a has-been. It is quite likely that they will have a dozen fights In the future, for so far there has been no inclination on the part of the Cali fornia fight promoters to Introduce new talent. The Attell-Moran Imbroglio will prob ably prove the most agreeable affair of the two, as both contestants have so far been free from the stain of faking and are believed to be honest In their en deavors to please the lovers of the gam. in their engagement one queer feature Is noticeable, and that is that 23 rounds will be the limit. Just why the 'va- CRACK SHOTS. OF ROSE CITY AND MULTNOMAH GUN CLUBS if I it Jf V 3 ' V l' If ; L IP'? it, U- " ,V . ' I I f S ,1 It . f ... -4 ' t: st ....f 4 A.' 1 or- -sa . t - 1 'i II nrt ml 5.' ssssssslttslhl 1 To. row (readng from left to rBht)-KeBdll. You.it, Doe, Howe. Caldwell. C. W,per. V. Sha.gel, Fay, Bell, Woelm, M. Sangel, l Pat ter.o. Uw ro-JDii, Johsaoa, Opj.ol.mM poorer), Frrd Wr, SteTe.1, Hoben.00, H(eU. Kdth. Th. accompanying photograph shows the Rose City Gun Club, and some of the members of the Multnomah Rod and Gun Club, who were their guesTT at the frophy shoot at the former club's traps, near Lents last Sunday. The marksmen grouped in the photograph are among the best wing shot. n th. Pacific Northwest, and several of them are holders of handsome trophies won at different trap-shooting contests. moose" number was selected as -the limit of the engagement does not seem quite clear, although this is only one of the queer things connected with fisticuffs in the land of the temblors, and occasional sunshine. The scrap might Just as well have been permitted for 25 rounds, or even limited to 20. As the Gans-Nelson affair is slated for 46 periods, it is possi ble that the promoters did not care to gtve the patrons too much at a time, for the other scrap Is scheduled for Septem ber 9, two days later. But, to get back at the original sub ject, the betting gentry will have its fling at the game of chance furnished by the coming scraps. Those who pick tne dead ones will have to stand their losses, while the winners will celebrate in the usual manner. To give advice on the subject Is a thankless task, for it is a hard matter to convince a full-fledged sport that his Judgment is wrong, at least until after the returns have been received. In the event of having picked a loser, the wise guy immediately an nounces that the scrap was not on its merits and either wants his monay back or declares emphatically that the con miornr of his Idol cannot do it asaln. 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Twenty Years of Success In the treatment of chronic diseases, such as liver, kidney and stomach disorders, constipation, diarrhoea, dropsical swellings, Bright's disease, etc. Kidney and Urinary Complaints, painful. bloody urine, difficult, too frequent, milky or Diseases of Men Blood poison, piles thoroughly cured. No failure. Cure guaranteed. , . YOUlVGr ME troubled with bashfulness, aversion lis avs it u j . Kidney and Liver Troubles cured without MERCURY OR OTHER POISONING DRUGS. Catarrh and rheumatism cured. BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES, painful, bloody urine. Varicocele, Hydrocele, Dr Walkers methods are regular and scientific. He uses no patent nos trums' or ready-made preparations, but cures the disease by thorough medical treatment. His New Pamphlet on Private Diseases Sfnt free to all men who describe their trouble. PATIENTS cured at home. Terms reasonable. All let ters answered in plain envelope. Consultation free and sacredly confidential. Call on or address DR. 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