THE StTXDAT OREGONIAX. PORTLAND. APRIL 17, 1910. BIG PURSE TO BE DANGLED If FULL FAST BASEBALL PLAYERS WHO ARE WEARING UNIVERSITY OF OREGON COLORS. BASEBALL'S CHIEF ASSET IS HONESTY THE GRABOWSKY TRUCKS HAVE ARRIVED And We Will Be Pleased to Show and Demonstrate Them to Interested Parties $10,000 Harness Event Will Be Run in Next Ponand Race Meet. Sport Grows in Hold on Public Because Free. From Taint of Crookedness. ,.Ws - . fit 7 EXPECT EASTERN HORSES BIG RACE MEET PLANNED HT7Tn ii 5 v -11-' all Hk .m b n . . xt v -a' - ' v : v . tt.j Largest Stake Kver Orfered for Har ness Race In Northwest Will Be I'caturc or Portland Kair and Livestock Association. BT TV. J. I-ETRAIN'. Next Fall, harness horse racing in Portland and the Northwest is to be signalled hy the offering of a 10,000 purse for one of the events to be run in the meet to be held under the aus pices of the Portland Fair and Uve atock Association. The stake will be the largest purse ever offered for a ; harness race in the Northwest, and the hanging- up or this big prize means that a number of the best- harness horses from tho grand circuit will be attracted here. Last year the association held a most successful meeting, and indications : point to one even more successful in the coming season. Harness, racing is gradually coming into popular favor and oecause of this the association be lieves in attracting the best possible horses to the meet, and the only, way to do this is to put up the most valu able purses possible. Grand Circuit Kvents Kqualod. The $10,000 purse will put the Port land meet on a par with any of the grand circuit events, for there are only two or three such offerings competed for on the big Eastern tracks. The bringing of the star performers from the East to the Northwest will not only benefit the game here, but it will mean an added interest all over the Pacific Northwest Fair Association's circuit, and will correspondingly in crease the purses offered at tho other tracks. After many years of struggling and sometimes losing money, the various associations in the Northwest foster ing the harness game are becoming recognized by the public. It has been a hard fight, but the wiping out of the running races with its accompany ing gambling evil has paved the way for the success of the legitimate har ness game, and the fancy steppers are finally neing appreciated. The public is still uneducated to this branch of sport, though the merit of the game is gradually impressing Itself on the patrons of races until it Is now possible to offer handsome purses with some degree of certainty of seeing the box office receipts make It worth the while, as well as earn the necessary expenses entailed upon the holding of a week-long meet. Dates Precede State Fair. Last year the Portland meet was tho most successful in tne history of the game In the Northwest. This year Portland has been extended the dates in advance of the Salem State Fair, and this of itself will help increase the Interest. In the sport here. The Port land Kair and Livestock Association has survived against odds, and now, with plain sailing ahead, and everv assurance or a successful and brilliant racing season, the stockholders who gamely stayed with the ship In ad versity are likely to'reap the rrults of their labor and faithfulness to a duty they performed so steadfastly. Preparations are being made for the placing of tne track in first-class con dition for the coming season, and as soon as the weather becomes settled the active work of rebuilding the track where necessary and the placing of the plant in readiness for the season will be commenced. Early entries indicate a fine series of races, for some of the best horses in California and the Mid : die West, as well as those of the North ; west, are already listed, and before many weeks the grand circuit per formers will be entered. Taking ! everything into consideration, the Portland meet this year promises to give the racing fans some of the very best sport to be had anywhere. Let us hope that the early prospects are eclipsed In the end. and that the meet will flourish and grow better each year .o come. is AT WORK Mullnontah BasebnU Tenm Plays Next Saturday. The . Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club baseball team will play Its first game of the season on the club field next Saturday with the First Infantry. TJ. S. A., team of Vancouver Barracks. The soldier boys have made some of Portland's fastest teams travel, and are expected to give the clubmen a run for their money. Baseball has assumed a bright aspect at the club and now that the rain has ceased, allowing the diamond to become , dry enough for use, all candidates are expected out at the evening practice. Several new men are showing to advan tage and will likely make positions on tho regular team. Jimmy Twohy reported for practice Thursday evening, showing he is an : accomplished inflelder and an all ; around good sportsman. He has been assigned to work out around the kev stone station and works the double play idea In a pleasing manner. The management expects much from the former Panta Clara College lad. Cass Campbell is accepting every thing that comes his way around short. being particularly effective In the t handling of ground balls and accurate throwing to the bases. Diminutive ; Parke Meyers la one of the reliable performers of tho squad and shows up strong at third base and In all proba bility will be assigned the berth per manently. Charley P.artonls demon strating he is an all around athlete, and Is not satisfied in defending the clubs colors on the basketball floor or at soccer, but is making a game try .for first base against Dick Jones. 1-M Shearer Is back on the catching . job. and will alternate behind the plate with Plowden Btott, who has an option on the catching. Shearer Is a valuable outfielder and with Stott In the game will likely adorn the right field. His heavy hitting counts. Al O'Brien, for merly of Columbia, and Ted McPher .jon, an old Portland Academy star, are trying out for the outfield. ', Captain Ed Morris goes Into the box 'occasionally, but If his shoulder does not improve he will play In the outfield. Sil Douglass Is the only new man who is trying out for pitcher and will be given a chance to demonstrate his abil ity. - J-iiiiai5sj' " if "T'TJ& f : ' " I f V t i f I rT P K Ml ftfO -f : A -Tt ' - l) S ' i r-- s I TEAM'S HOPES HIGH Oregon, Now on Tour, Expects Baseball Championship. TWENTY GAMES SCHEDULED University Players Are in Midst of Hardest Season on Record, but Are Doing Great Work Vn der Coach Tom Kelly. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON', Eugene. Or., April 16. (Special.) After starting the season with four straight victories on the florae grounds against other col leges of the Northwest Intercollegiate Baseball League, the University of Ore gon baseball team left Wednesday morn ing on a 10-day trip through Washington and Idaho. Eight games will be playel during the 10 days. If the team is able to do as well as to break even on the road, Oregon's chances for winning the Northwest Intercollegiate baseball championship, for which it tied with Washington last year, will be bright. The full schedule for the season calls for 20 games, and Is the heaviest the varsity team has ever attempted. The Oregon team this season is easily the fastest that has represented the uni versity. Under the coaching of "Father" Tom Kelly, an old Coast League player, the team has developed a snap anil dash and knowledge of "inside baseball" tac tics rare with college players. At pres ent nearlyevery man on the nine has NEW IMPERIAL HOTEL BUS, BUILT ENTIRELY BY A LOCAL ITT' 3 i" v vm .: "9vj i,xi c 1 9 4 Ss L tOM.lOOIOLS, AM) AITKACTIVK VEHRI.E ttl.VSTKUTKD BY BELMORE, 1 r:iv --I struck a bad batting slump, but after a few games on the road they expect to hit- their stride with the stick. This is Kelly's second season as baseball coach at Oregon, and the results of his work of last Spring, when he practically de veloped a winning nine out or, untried material, have shown clearly In the games so far played. Before taking charge of the squad three weeks ago, Kelly coached the Santa Clara College team which won 14 straight games and the championship of California, defeat ing Berkeley and Stanford with ease. From Eugene the team went straight to Seattle, where it played Washington Thursday. Friday it played the Spokane team of the Northwest League at Spo kane, going from there to Pullman for two games against W. S. C. Tuesday and Wednesday the schedule calls for games with the University of Idaho at Moscow, and the trip will end with a double-header against Whitman at Walla Walla Thursday and Friday. One of the big factors In giving Oregon such a good start in the league race has been the pitching of Ferdinand llenkla. the Portland lad who is now in his third season on the varsity squad. Henkle did some remarkable work in tee box last year, one of his twirling feats being a 16-inning game against the Multnomah club team In which he struck out 20 men and allowed only four hits, but lost 2 to 1. Three of Oregon's early season vic tories were won with him in the box. In the 27 innings he has allowed only one run.- while the last 30 Innings were shut outs. Henkle is a left-hander with wicked speed and sharp breaks, combined with good control. He had a chance to sign with Charlie Graham's Sacramento team In the Coast League this season, but pre ferred to finish his college course before trying professional ball. Captain Dudley Clarke, who is playing the best game of his career in center, is another man on the team who turned down an offer to enter fast company In order to play with his college. Cliff Blankenshlp, of the Tacoma Tigers, wu particularly anxious to get Clarke's name to a contract, but the Oregon - man de clined. Clarke Is the heaviest hitter on the team. t t,-. ....:... A- -4- U ? " i Portland Livestock Association Is to Offer One $10,000 Purse for Harness Event Other Timely Notes of Sporting "World, BT 'W. J. PETRAIX. Once more the baseball season is on in earnest, and throughout the land the big and little leagues, grammar school organizations and the boys of the sand lot, whence the big league stars emanate, tre playing the National game. It Is a great game, and'its hold on the American public Is so strong that many men would be absolutely lost without the oppor tunity of seeing a baseball contest occa sionally during the season. What gives baseball such a hold on tho heartstrings of the public? This is a question often asked" by those to whom the gase does not appeal. Honesty. That is the answer. Of all professional sports, the American game of baseball is the one game that is free from the taint of bribery and crookedness. It is a sport that cannot be manipulated to suit the fancy of the. gambling element, end It is the elimination of the betting evil that makes the game so popular and lnsrures Its hold on public approval for years to come. Neither speculation nor gain can be said to control baseball, for time and again opportunities have arisen whereby the dishonest apportionment of a cham pionship would have redounded to the. financial gain of all concerned. Tet the pennant races where such could have taken place were determined on their merits and smaller cities were victorious against the larger centers of population. As a sport free from the taint of cor ruption baseball stands alone among professional pastimes. Portland promises to enjoy one of the most successful racing seasons ever ex perienced in the : Northwest since th passing of the ponies and the curse of bookmaking. Next Fall the Portland Fair and Livestock Association will hold its fourth annual meeting ot harness races, and many high-class Eastern studs, it Is expected, will be attracted West by the handsome purses. In the past the promoters of the har ness races in the Northwest have been compelled to seek public help in the ef fort to hang up suitable purses, as. the sport had not thrived in public favor to the extent of attracting the money for the prtees at the gate. In the last sev eral years the attendance at the harness meets has increased each season, and the coming meet promises, to be most popu lar of all. In anticipating this season's increase in public favor the promoters of the Portland meet have decided to offer a purse of $10,000 for one event, and this will be the highest stake ever put up in this vicinity in the history of the sport.' Such enterprise deserves success, and this year's meet of the Portland Fair and Livestock Association should go down Into history as the "best ever." President Graham, of the Pacific Coast League, has taken a step toward the elimination of rowdyism from the field, In a manner that should bring results. A week or so ago a Sacramento player as saulted an umpire on the ball field be cause the official did not see a play as the player saw It. No matter how faulty tho official's judgment may have been, such action on the part or any player or manager is deserving of sum mary punishment. The fining of Pitcher Whalen and his suspension for a month are justifiable in every particular, and It is to be hoped that the pleadings of Sacramento will not be permitted to di minish the sentence In the slightest de gree. Good, bad or indifferent, the um pires must be protected. If they are In competent. It Is the duty of the president of the league to discharge them, but it is not within the province or the player or fans to assault them. Yesterday Columbia University held its annual track meet in the big gymnasium of that institution on the Peninsula. As those of the past, the meet was most successfully conducted, and once mors AUTOMOBILE COMPANY. : '. V r Jf U ti " V . -JiH-'""-"-;- ' - M.VCDOIGAI.L, MOORKS roMPAXI i 1 THE GRABOWSKY is distinguished from other trucks by its quick removable power plant, its extreme accessibility and simplicity these quali ties are absolutely essential to a commercial power wagon GO VET MOTOR CAR CO. Seventh and Couch Streets the faculty and student body of Colum bia are to be congratulated for fostering a beneflclal sport. The merit of track athletics Js not generally appreciated as It should be. for this branch of athletics usually exists because of the patriotism of the Institution in drawing on a gen eral athletic fund for its support. However, Columbia University has established this meet as an annual affair, and each year tho patronage seems to Increase. This indicates that eventually the sport will prove self-supporting, as it should be. Next Saturday the tenth annual pen nant race of the Northwestern League will be Inaugurated by President Ideas' organization. "While the circuit has been cut from six to four clubs, there is more general Interest than last season. Se attle, Tacoma, Spokane and Vancouver, B. C. now comprising the league, seem to have arrayed good clubs, and the race should be closer and harder fought than the competition of last year. Joe Corbett. the one-time sterling pitcher of the famous Baltimore Orioles, Is steadily on the decline. Corbett, arter retiring from the game for three years when at the height of his career in the big leagues, came from retirement and joined the Los Angeles club in 1903, and was instrumental In pitching that team Into the championship. Last year he tried to pitch for San Francisco, but was unsuccesKrul. and this year finds him in the Triple C class D League formed of small towns in the vicinity of San FVan cisco. The first umpire to he seen in Port E5 ilk I?! ;' - land this season will be Eugene Mc Greevy. eaellv the premier indicator handler of President Graham's staff. Mc Oreevy gave satisfaction last season, and accounts of his work thus far indicate that he has not "gone back." MACHINE REPLACES 10 MEN Salt Lake Inventor AVould Interest Big Packers in Invention. In the endeavor to enlist ' the "local Swift pecking plant in an invention that will permit one machine to replace ten men. N. J. Torkelson Is in Porttand 7 Peerless, Pope-Hartford, Chalmers, Hudson, Gramm Commercial Vehicle THE new $1,800 Rambler is the same in A quality and materials as the higher-priced models. In fact, it is a reproduction in smaller size of the new 45-horsepower Rambler. Built for the man who wants a car of some what smaller size, yet of exceptional but not extreme power; a car easier to get about with and easier to drive. NEW toe With 34-horsepower engine, the Rambler offset crank shaft, straight-line drive, S6-inch wheels the advan tages of clearance Spare Wheel, engine accessibility, aluminum front floor and magneto included, is some what better than other cars selling at a higher price. May we give you a demonstration? Rambler Automobile Company 526-8 Henrv TCinlrllnrr PnrtLnnd 3 "S ' sV . 5 .V? 1 ,.V),1Si .'-vV jar s v-x. ? yJf :' vl from Salt Lake City. Mr. Torkelsen is staying st 265 Third street. By means of a large power-drlverk drum, equipped with blunt teeth, -with a patented preparation inside, Mr. Torkol cpn believes he has solved tho way to clean beef casings by machinery. Ac present theso casing are cleaned by hand and the work is slow and laborious. By Mr. Torkclson's method from live to 13 sets of casings may be cleaned at ona time in less than 30 minutes. The pres ent method requires a man to each cas ing. If he Is successful in interesting th local packing-houses. Mr. Torkelsen sopes to" submit his macliine to packers at other meat centers. Bi-zema and other nkln dlsordor-i can bs TUiekly and completely cured with a few applications of Santlsepttc Lotion. " - . . w , . . .. ....