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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1908)
THE SUNDAY OKEGOXIAX, PORTLAND), XOTE3IBER 22. I90S. AGHIEVEMENTlS1 DURING 1908 IN kSPEED, iJIZB, :3W 5Hi FT JtXES WARWICK PRICE. m. INETREN eight promises to have wrlttn itself down for all time aa a year of "record." American crop from wheat to whisky, from petro leum to peanuts, have left far. far behind the old familiar figures. The foreign mails, outward bound (thanks to the year at last achieved "penny post" with England) have as surely set new high water marks as have the foreign males. Inward bound. In January, Master Roy abtn. of Great Barrlngton, Mass., set one record when he entered upon a thir teenth year of unbroken attendance, at Sunday school. ,Wlth the closing days of the 30i comes word of a dally paper to be Immediately established In London "to contain nothing but unvarnished truth"; another record, surely even those Ohio ballot-boxes, made from sugar barrels to accommodate the giant local tickets, pale before this trans-Atlantic word. East to west, north to south, the same atory ha been told things bigger or fast er, smarter or stronger, have been the rule, not tie exception. The first motor car ever to honk through Jerusalem's streets set the venerable Hebrews dodg ing in March, when C. J. Gildden arrived there, and troubled Persia has dispatched an ambassador to Athens for the first time In i little matter of 2C59 years. On li;e other side of the Klobe Alaska sends down word of a "0.01)0.000 gold output for the Spring season, while Southern Cali fornia figures out that never before had she had such lots snd lots of lemons. Query: Had the Presidential year any thing to do with that? When Sesaphlm eff, master gardener of Vorenesh, Russia, proclaimed to the world that he had really grown a black rose; when C. H. Healy. of Melbourne, Australia, succeed ed In playlrg 50V hours on a piano, with out stopping, they merely broke two more records. The piano managed to pull through. The Race for Speed. To the reckless God of Speed prayers have been offered up every week of the b2 and many of them have been an swered. May. tor Instance, witnessed an auto run between Newport and Boston distinctly beyond the usual. Mr. and Mrs. ii. J. Wagstaff. escaping from some too-enthusitullc guenta at their wedding that morning, jogged over the 73 miles in tervening between the Rhode Island city and the Hub in three minutes better than two hours. A month later and the Italian Nazxaro. at London's "Brookiands" course, drove a car four times faster than that: though it rt borne in mind thAt tne fleeing Wagstaffs were on country Toads. Willie the professional "Shover" sufficed himself with leva than two miles at his U-an-hour speed. Sports, strictly so classified, do not be long in such a story as this, however, else tlie name of "Marathon" Hayes would stand at the top of the roster. But more than just sport entered into the splendid run of that Thomas car from New York to Paris, and It was sport plus something bcirirs when. In July. 1131 Y. M. C. A. boys ran a relay from New York to Chl cmko. hearing a message from Mayor Mc Ol.llan to Mayor Busse. For that 1092 miles the actual running time was 114 hours. 2s minutes, an average of 9.6 miles n hour. But what shall be said of the speed of "another Ilk" which built and fur nished a house in one working day? An East St. Louis contractor did that. At A. M. the foundation trench was fin ished: at neon 31 workmen were finish ing the roof; at 4 P. M. the sashing and clapboard Ing was completed, and at 7 P. M. the neighbors helped the bride and irroom move Into a f mr-room dwelling, with plumbing, gas and electricity all complete. On the Water. And man n. done as notable things on water as on land, as OS's months have followed one snother down the calendar. The entries of this sort are. Indeed, so many -.ha they must be merely tabu lated if even bare mention of them is to oe cnJ. Cur.ncry record I". S. cruiser Mary land. 5 teaming in battle formation. 10 knot snee!. made 8.43 hits per minute In a target 13 by 21 feet. 1700 yards away. Kebruar I. IV.-troycr speed record H. M. naval destroyer Tartar, maintained 84.71 knots for a two-hour run. equaling at her best 89 95 knots. (May). Cruiser speed record V. 8. scout erutewr Salem, off the Maine coast, at tained a speed of a.ss knots over a meas ured mile. I June 1. ' Coaling record I". S. cruiser North Carolina, coaling at Newport, took on 4'7 tons In an even thr.-e hurs. which Included the time of rigging the gear, t June . Battleship sieed record H. M. battle ship Indomitable, returnm.-t to England from the vu.'boc tereenteiutay. with the Tiin-t of Wales aowil. rrunis-'red an av'iac sieed. from i.id to land, of 24 knots an hour. tJulyl. Transatlantic record The Cunarder Lusitanla made the "short course west ward In 4 days. 15 hours. 25 minutes. IAukusO. Motor-boat record The Pixie II aver aged more than 76 statute miles an hour In her Hudson River trials. (September). This last, however, again borders upon the fie'J of sport. ' Airships and aeroplanes, for a like rea son, are "barred" from place In these paragraphs, but there yet La much to be said cf the way venturesome man Is climbing heavenwards. First. Great Falls. lont., set up the world's largest smoke tack. its l'V" tons of concrete leading to a height of &x feet. Then New York s 'Metropolitan building raa up a 700-foot tower. The Equitable building la to climb to " feet, and tha Mills building is to top that again by another 100. equal 7v CfS, liv to ing the Eiffel structure. But what of all this? , Architects and engineers have now figured out that a 2000-foot Dima lng is practical. It would cost some $60. 000.000. but the chances are fair that we shall see it soon leaving poor little St. Peter's at Rome in a veritable valley, and dwarfing old Storm King Mountain. Apropos of mountains. August saw a St. Bernard climb Mont Blanc In search of a master who had left him behind at Chamounlx. when himself going up: while, on the 6th of the same month, a Mr. Burr, of Boston, broke- all local climbing records by ascending the peaks of the Jungfrau, the Moench and the Eiger In one day;, the first ascent being made by lantern light. Nor were the women to be left behind. In the Himalayas Mrs. Workman has topped a peak something more than 23.000 feet up In the air. and In the. Peruvian Andes. Miss Peck has reached the 2S.000 foot summit of Huascaran. The Doings of Women. Perhaps Turkey's women have set the year s highest record In things dealing directly with their sex for they have fought free at last from the lor.g-worn yashmak, the chaste but tantalizing veil. At last the traveler in the Near East may now pass Judgment upon the stand ards of harem beauty, and compare It with that which won a "contest" in Eng land in the early Spring. Fifteen thou sand photographs had been entered, but Miss Ivy Close received the unanimous vote of the twenty artist-Judges. Miss Margaret Fry, of Denver, stood proxime accesslt. What are some of the other "records" due to womanhood's efforts? Gladstone Dowte Is no longer unklssd; Miss Sybil Peterson, of Muskegon. Mich., achieved that. Ethel Geraldine Hanton-Rlvers-Goldsmlth set quite another sort of record when she was twice, divorced in one week, and she only 23: while at the other end of the marital ladder Miss Truly Shattuck. the American comedienne now playing In London, has "officially" announced that she has received a proposal of marriage every 4S hours for the past seven years. In connection with the stage, it may be added that "the Divine Sara" has this j year died Tor tne la.uwin time Dy siuse poison, stage guns and daggers. Boston closes the list with two distinct ly unusual entries. Marie Hogan lias carried the largest pyramid of full dishes ever moved without mishap. The tray held the dinners of sixteen prisoners In the county Jail, and It reached them safely in Marie's broad, deft hands across 1200 feet of slippery floor. Besides this, the present-day Athens of this land of pie has a cjok who has presided over the ranges or one restaurant lor some thing more than 40 years. This alone is a record (with deep-breathed emphasis!), but there is more to come; the lady in question has baked 3M.000 pies. 2.000.000 doughnuts, and concocted at least 7,0u0 puddings. The Domestic Side of It. This surely sounds "like mother used to make": It has the real hearthstone air about It. To it then add these items of similar kind: The same good commonwealth claims (unchallenged the butter championship of the world, with "Johanna." who ante ed up 35.22 pounds In one working week. Her yearly milk output totals at 27.433 pounds. What results migl be obtained if such cows could only be "treated" by Mis souri's prize milking machine! It Han dles six subjects at a time. Two boys, thus armed, milked a herd of 7a cows in an hour and nine minutes. Illinois puts in her bid with announce ment of sheltering the world s best plow man. In September Alvln Stark, of Jollet, drove a single sulky plow with three horses over an acre lot without the varia tion of half an inch In his furrows, measured at both ends and In the middle. Vermont has the record woodchopper. however. Edward Mott, of Weathers field, in an hour and a half, under the sunrise-to-sunset period of a September day, cot. chopped, split and plied five and an eighth cords. South Dakota has produced the year's, heavyweight farmer. Caton Hoblett, of Clark, weighs a little matter of 512 pounds and still attends strictly and ac tively to his 1500 acres. Had he lived In Berlin he might have won a prize on his weight, for a restaurant-keeper In the Kaiser's capital of fered cash bonuses for the three heaviest couples among his patrons. The winners aggregated 568. with a oi'O combination in second place and one of 457 In third. (The prize-giver did not-make clear whether or no the sextet achieved these bulky dimen sions in his establishment). Last, but far from feast, the shirtwaist that buttons down the back, long an ex citing domestic problem, has entered the lists with Its record, too. A champion ship contest has been pulled off in Chi cago, "an even dozen handy men being entered. They were 24-button waists, with lace and flllgree attachments. ""First honors went to an ambitious little ch.ap, who did the trick In two minutes seven seconds and the lace not so much aa mussed. Tears and Miles. In September. 10-year-old W. J. Sidis. of Brookline. Mass.. passed his entrance examinations for "The Tech" Boston's high-grade scientific college, where the average age of first-year students is 21. Three months earlier, Maurice Mo rlarlty sailed from New York for Ire land for his first vacation In 54 years. He was an employe of the Cheney Mills, at Manchester. Ct-. and had worked week days and Sundays for over 30 years and six days out of every seven for the balance of his time. And In this matter of years yet three other happenings of the 12-month de mand notice. Glasgow. Scotland, has produced a family of five whose com bined ages aggregate SS4; Altendorf. Hungary, has witnessed a marriage be tween a husband of 120 and a wife of 102; and Chlkuga. Japan, has located the oldest man In the world within her picturesque limits Mr. Kosaburo Futl matsu is 171 by well-authenticated rec- if x " jL - -.m zzz&zmw -T2r - ords. Up to the day of this discovery Andrleff Schmidt, son of a German once resident In Vilna. Russia, had been held the veteran of living venerables, with 136 years to his credit; when he heard he had fallen to second place he walked over to Warsaw just to show he was not incapacitated by the news, the dis tance between the cities is some miles. Another travel record of 1908 was made when 3-year-old Wilfred Stevens made the 11,000-mile trip from South Africa to New York. In charge only of a motherly stewardess. Left an orphan he was being sent here to relatives and he - seemed to think he had done nothing out of the ordinary. After that, for mere carrier pigeons to make a fast 1200 miles from Minneapolis to Boston reads tamely. A Few "Blggest-Evers. Bigness appeals to the 20th century mind, and 1908 has done yeoman's work in golng-a-few-better previous measurements and dimensions. The nine months from February to October offered the news dispatches of the wide world's press Just as many items and again refuge must be sought in the "nutshell paragraph." February A candle 10 feet tall, war ranted to burn for more than two years, was made for New York's cathedral. March Major Henry Lethwaite Arm strong, of the British forces in India. achieved what had been held impossible In killing with one bullet from his service revolver, a man-eating tiger. It measured nine feet three inches from nose to tail. April J. G. Millsay, of Brady. Tex., found In the San Saba River, near Me- , WIS. MICHIGAN oXOCKTORV I .X. N ! t3 'i.o&Ansronx1 I nardvllle. a fresh-water pearl the size . of a hen s egg. and weighing a grille I more than 1000 grains. Some Fake Scheme? of Expert Wrestlers Easiest Sort of a Banco Game Foisted on' Rural Sporting Men and a Gullible Public. l(iT HERE is more hippodrome busi I ness in the wrestling game than in any other line of sport," said an old-time referee the other night to a number of friends at an uptown hotel. "In fact, there have been very few wrestling matches which have been pulled off strictly on the level Many of the great grapplers of the past and present have done much to kill the game with their fake matches." says the New York Sun. "It's a very easy matter for a cou ple of clever faking wrestlers to frame up a bout and fool the public I know of a scheme that is. worked success fully even now In rural places. One fellow will locate In a far-away city and get into the good graces of the local sporting men. He will soon con vince them that he is a real champion and will finally secure backing for a thousand or two. A broad, defiant challenge is issued in the newspapers offering to wrestle any man in the world for all kinds of money. There is much newspaper clatter over the challenge, when Faker No. 2. who. Is in with the deal, wires his acceptance and after a stormy newspaper wrangle the match Is made. Then follows a lot more talk and boosting. The town is billed as for a circus and the two fakers start training at different quar ters. They appear on the streets and roads in showy costumes day after day until the local sports are worked up to a high pitch of excitement. "oe managers of the fakers play a prominent part In the hippodrome. They appear at the leading hotels, dressed in the most sporty clothes, cov ered with alleged diamonds and offer ing to bet almost any amount on the result. They make all kinds of bluffs before the dazzled crowd of young men, who look upon them as real live kings. The managers often go so far as to mrZ,L imwh WW"- f 1 1 J ri f nvrnv "VCijr L'TTi Si oY . WW BliiMi 111- m- ml 11 MaMa , -.. BATTLE CREEK-. I OWION! May The biggest clock In the world I was started in the tower of the works of Colgate & Co., near Jersey City. The ' have a fake fight in. some leading re sort in the presence of the-innocent lambs they are about to fleece. Some times the .managers have, each other arrested to make the supposed brawl look more genuine, but of course when they appear before the local judge they are not inclined to press the complaint and discharge follows. "All this time one of the managers has been making some real bets here and there on the wrestler who Is booked to win. In this way a few extra thousands of dollars are gathered in by the com bine. When all is framed the largest ball In town Is Jammed with come-on sports who are crazy to see the bout. The ex citement is Intense, the betting lively, and each wrestler is uproariously re ceived when he is introduced. Usually an hour is wasted In a wrangle over the selection of a referee, but finally some well-known local sporting maji. who may be honest, is chosen. He swells up be cause of the honor thrust upon him, but knows nothing of the job to be pulled off. "The referee's part Is no child's play, for the wrestlers are appealing to him constantly and make all kinds of phony claims. The wrestlers have rehearsed it all with great care. They have, worked the trick on other innocent referees be fore. They go at each other in appar ently the most desperate-manner, making as much noise and display as possible. " 'Mr. Referee, this man is trying to choke me!" cries one of the fakers. " 'Ifa not so! He's trying to gouge my eyes out." yells the other. "'Foul! Foul" exclaim the lamb around the ring in much confusion. The referee gets excited and puzzled. The wrestlers keep up this sort of thing for an hour until the man booked to win gets the referee's decision while the gulliable sports go home well sat isfied with what they term a great night's sport. The band of fakers gather up the spoils as quickly as pos sible and decamp. "There was a big Greek wrestler. j. 1 S V , -..f 77Z4V .W9 rosTo v r iwmwvi , rr5ru-uperER. . SrAR" 'UZr-,Tg-rl '-V-l!,.. 'iA1 ' ('. JJLM1RA. Warren a ADOOea.in SCRANTON, LOCK HAVE oBUTLTR. dial is 38 feet in diameter, the hour 1 hand 15 feet long and the mintue hand 20. Twenty men, shoulder to shoulder,' Greek George who worked the game a few years ago from Montreal to New Orleans and in almost every big city from New York to San Francisco. He was the real prince of fake wrestlers. At Montreal he posed as a Frenchman, for ho was a smart talker and could speak' many languages, particularly French. At New Orleans he was sup posed to be an Italian, while in other places he adopted some other nation ality. The Greek was really a very clever Graeco-Roman wrestler and could throw -almost any man in the world in hia style. However, he cared nothing for glory, but preferred the big end of the gate receipts. He would agree to win or lose according to the money that was in it for him. "Once the Greek was engaged to lie down to an alleged champion in his class for a couple of hundred dollars. The match was pulled off in this city and the Greek went quietly among his countrymen offering to take half of all the bets they could place on him. The alleged champion was so sure of hav ing everything his own way that he did not take the trouble to train, but the Greek was in perfect form and the way he slammed b.is man around that night delighted his countrymen. " 'You don't have to work so hard, said the alleged champion, who was badly winded. 'We've gone far enough! I'll throw you now!' But the Greek never let up until he had put the so called champion three times on his back and had been declared the win ner. " Tt sometimes pays to be on the level." said the Greek as the stake holder paid over to him the big end of the purse and the gate money. The next match between them drew a greater crowd, but this time the Greek laid down to the alleged champion, for he got the bulk of the coin for turning this trick. The Greek finally became the owner of a trained bear and pro HUDSON ' -RHINE BECK 9? 4? pouohkeepsii: A Vsa "TC7KKER! POTTSVILtE JERSEv could stand across its iace, which is 1134 square feet in area June The largest shark, ever cap- ceeded to wrestle with him at side shows and circuses In small towns. But he never could teach the bear to lose, for every time Mr. Bruin came to the scratch he was on the level, no mat ter which way the gate "or purse was cut. "There are hundreds of minor wrest lers who are making a catch-as-catch-can living by hippodromlng through the small cities and towns. They travel in pairs and manage to clean up a few dollars with their trick schemes. A couple of these fakers from the Bowery last Winter, tired of living on free lunches, made their way to a hustling, town over in New Jersey. Thoy met a saloonkeeper who wanted to be a leading light in th sporting world and to him they unfolded their scheme. He agreed to get them some printing and engaged the hall for the show. But that was all. On the strength of the show bills they secured a room in a second-class hotel and spent a couple of days billing the town themselyes. They sold a few tickets meal tickets to them, for they were good and hungry. They had only one sweater between them, so that while one was in bed the other, donning the sweater, would run through the main street Just as the factory hands were going to work. Then the other faker would put on the sweater about the noon hour and do another stunt near the factories. In a few days the match was the talk of the town. The local newspaper sent a reporter to their room one fine morning and he found both in bed. tired out after a long siege with the beer kegs. But one of the wrestlers was quick-witted enough to jump out of bed and say to the pencil pusher: ' 'Ycu sec, my trainer is asleep. I ran him off his feet early this morn ing and the poor fellow Is all In.' "Then the fake wrestler, while his pal hid his face under the bedclothes, noured a wonderful tale into the re porter's ear about the proposed match. The young scribe was thoroughly Im pressed, too. " 'At what hotel is. your opponent stopping?" asked the reporter as he was leaving. "'What hotel? Why, that .fellow is Iliiiiil tured was taken in San Pedro Bay, Cal ifornia, weighing H.000 pounds." and . measuring 32 feet. The mouth, opened, was two and one-half feet across. July After for, four years' watching and guarding its growth at the foot of an old oak. B. B. Sterling, of Trenton, N. J., harvested a 26-pound mushroom. August The largest elephant's tusk ever brought out of Africa was shipped to London. It measured something over 10 feet in length and was valued at $2im September The largest passenger steamer and the largest battleship yet launched took water, British built and British owned: The White Star Liner Laurentic and H. M. S. St. Vincent. October The largest of submarines was launched at Cherbourg. She is 20S feet long, of 625 tons displacement, and 15 knot speed. Words and Weather. "Biggest ever" also might be applied not Inexactly to such of the '08 events as the recorded testimony in the Govern ment's case against the great Standard Oil concern 4.400.000 words; 13 volumes, that is, with five more of "exhibits." Senator LaFollette's speech, too the now historic filibuster in which the Wisconsin leader indulged, in the closing days of the last session of Congress, was "weighty" to record lengths; it turned the scales at 19 pounds. But has not the talking "record" gone to Mr. Bryan? Forty-seven speeches In two days, telling speeches at that, each one, long or short, fitted on the instant to the human "problem" confronting the orator that is an achievement both unique and worth having to one's credit. "Words, words, words," quoth the tiiel ancholy Dane, unconsciously stating tha text for such happenings as these. And aiiss Fritz has won the world champion ship on the typewriter, batting out 27? completed words per minute. And C. W. Conkling. at the Denver convention last Spring, sent 73.000 words ticking their way over the wires Into New York in 2i hours something like 52 words every minute. And a 14-year-old colored maiden in Cleveland touched yet another high-, water mark, when she spelt the 500 test words at a "bee" with never a miss; 14 or 40. black, white, yellow or red, that's a genuine victory. Need it be added that the weather has been asetting records, along with the rest of the busy world? London's July had to show only 37 hours of sunshine In 17 days: Strawn, Tex., did all but break its thermometers in September , with 112 de grees on the 7th; while, on the 24th of April, Mississippi played unwilling hos tess to no less than eight tornadoes, be tween 2:40 A. M. and 6 P. M. "Killed, 155; injured, 971; property loss, Jl.021.d00," is the briefest statement of a meteorolog ical freak (fortunately) rare indeed. Brother Jasper's immortal "The sun do move" would be so fitly true to such a summary of the 12-months' "Records" if only he had turned his penny over and made the remark of this good old world. Everything moves, and man must per force progress, too or get run over. So It is that each closing year brings eome such chronicle under its arm, as it come3 down to the footlights to say good-night. Superlatives may some day run short. Indeed even as they did for poor "Kid" De Chico, of New York, when, only a couple of days ago, he admitted to the sergeant in charge of the East 104th street station that he had been "pulled" Just 27 times since January last came in. too mean to stop at a first-class hotel,", was the reply.- 'He's on of those sav ing guys. He's probably In some freight car down at the depot." The lo cal paoer gave the match a good spread that evening an,d a big crowd attended, ignorant of the fact that it was a 'frame' The wrestlers lived there on the fat of the land for another week and then came back to the Bowery, with new clothes and $2.10 each. The sports of that same Jersey town are still talking about 'the great' wrest ling contest' and are anxious to have a return match.. "The expert wrestling fakers have a large field to work in this country, most of them refraining from turning off their tricks more than once in the same town. Here tu New York the wrestllnp; game is practically dead, for some of the rawest fakes have been pulled off In Madison-Square Garden and other big halls, while local sporting men have not forgotten how they have been fleeced by the Terrible Turks and other alleged wonders from across the sea. Besides, the boxing clubs are so active In the metropolis just now that they give New Yorkers all the redhot sport they need." Rondeau. Chicairo News. There was a scrap of paper that sha found A tiny piece her husband left around. It was a portion of a loving note, Apparently, that some fond woman, wrote. Its terms were, calculated to astound. It was no wonder that the iady frownei And clenched her fists. It seemed sh had some ground. She searched in a pocket of his coat, There was a scrap. She put the two together. She wai bound. Although her loving heart It well might wound, To know. His explanations I'll not quote. But he was innocent. Neighbors re mote Heard something of It. Judging by the sound. There was a scrap! t