14 THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, MARCH 26. 1916. Y. l G. A. CONTEST STARTS TOMORRCW Attempt Will Be Made to Ex ceed Last Year's Record of 1 100 New Members. SEATTLE TEAMS WILL VIE Institution Stands for Higher Stand ard of Manhood and Puts Athletic Endeavors Jn Secondary Place. The membership contest between the Seattle Y. 2VI. C. A. and the Portland Y. SI. C. A. will beg-in In both cities at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning-. Aided by Colonel "Werlein and Colonel Davidson, with their staffs and cap tains and organized squads, (General Woodward will attempt to exceed the records of last year, at which time 1100 new members were obtained. The canvassing committees are sup plied with 5000 cards of eligible young men in the city of Portland. We be lieve that more than half that number will be secured. Tne Y. M. C. A. of Portland has been one of the progressive institutions of the city and the state. It has been the character workshop for the turning out of strong- men and for the equipment of men whose earlier years have been handicaped through lack of education. Hixtory Reads Like Fiction. It works and plans and develops upon a high plane the 'gang instinct," which Is uppermost in boys in all stages of their lives. It gives the gangster a better and cleaner association than he gets on the street and it turns his abil ity to constructive things rather than to destructive. The history of the Portland Y. M. C. A. reads much like popular fiction of the day. The movement started in 1868 under the spell of a great religious en thusiasm in the city. It was quartered in the basement of the First Presby terian Church, where the Ladd & Tilton Bank now stands, and Its members de voted their time to singing gospel songs and praying on the streets. It was the same sort of work that the Salvation Army now does. Ileadins-Koom Opened in 1880. Along about 1880 a reading-room was added to the equipment. Forty years ago the association found the gymnasiums of the country in the hands of broken-down prizefighters and located in the rear of barrooms. There was no clean place-where men or wom en might be taught physical develop ment and culture. It was along- this line that the Y. M. C. A. began to make its first progress. They combined the idea of religion with physical develop ment, and from their training- schools have come Instructors for most of the colleges and universities in the country today. From the Portland Y. M. C. A. came the great playground movement which has spread all over the city. Athletics Made Secondary. The idea of the association has not been to make record-breaking athletes, but for the use of athletics as efficient aids to the creation of healthful stu dents, clerks, professional men and me chanics. Athletics in the Y. M. C. A. are used as a part of character-building. The Portland Y. M. C. A. has been the originator of much that Is now before the people of the state. Specifi cally might be mentioned the Juvenile Court of Portland, Portland play grounds, the Oregon Social Hygiene So ciety, garden-growing contests and poultry-growing contests. Many of these movements have been taken up by the County Courts and by associa tions which have been specially formed to undertake their management. While these movements are in evi dence, it should be understood that the religious feature of the organization has never been and is not abandoned. Bible study forms a part of -every course which is opened to the members. 1600 Entered in Xlght School. At the large central building at the corner of Sixth and Taylor streets as many as a hundred gatherings may be in session any one night of the week. Swimming classes, boxing classes, plumbing classes, singing clubs, tour naments, gospel meetings, wrestling bouts, debating societies, Bible studies and all sorts of educational classes may be found operating, inspired with the same altruistic purpose making bet ter men. Sixteen hundred students are now registered in the night schools of the Y. M. C. A. They are investing their time as young men with the expec tation that they will be able to effi ciently fill a niche in the Oregon so cial scheme. The big building is a city within it self, and one of all nationalities. Japs, Jews. Swedes, men and boys, without regard to race, may be found assem bled in every room for some specific purpose. Attendance Is 4000 Daily. Four thousand men enter the front door of the Y. M. C. A. building at Portland every 24 hours of the year. The elevator in the building traveled 8000 miles last year. And the equip ment of the present home includes everything from children's games for the youngest boys of 10 or 12 years of age to the most complicated electrical machinery. The Portland Y. M. C. A. operates, for instance, the most powerful wire less plant on the Pacific Coast. It fre quently furnishes news that is print ed in Portland newspapers from points designated as being at sea. The Portland Y. M. C. A. is not a charitable institution. It Is trying to help men who are helping themselves. Its educational features are so or ganized that not more than 15 students are assigned to one teacher. The rea son for this is that, if education means character building, the result will only be obtained where the teacher has character and the time and oppor tunity to impart it to his pupils. Meal-Ticket Han Is Followed. The educational branch is organized on the meal-ticket plan. The student is supplied with a ticket on which a certain number of lessons are indicat ed. and his ticket is punched at the conclusion of every lesson he receives. If he is unable to attend continuous ly to his studies he may take his lea sons at wide intervals. In the west side of the building is the section assigned to the younger boys. It is a sort of self-government club. They are supplied with games and are taught swimming and other athletics suitable for their develop ment. Most of the members in this de partment are students of the public schools. On another floor there is a home for boys whose parents have been di vorced or whose home arrangements have been disrupted for some other reason beyond their control. The boy is supplied with a good bed and his meals are furnished to him at cost. A kitchenette adjoins the dormitory set aside for this little nome, and its entire operations are shut off from TEAMS WHICH ARE TO COMPETE r i I 5 hs4 W isy 1 I " . I -; , p - h ' V - h : I ? & (1) Front Row (Left to Right) J. W. palmer. Secretary; S. Lnthrop, Lieutenant-Colonel; O. W. Davidson, Colo nel; H. JB. Wit ham, Lieutenant-Colonel; O. M. Anfier, Secretary. Second Row (Left to RJcht) Walter Hint. Ingtoo, George Moore, O. W. AVItt, G. W. TVellson, It. G. Hulib, T. It. West, J. D. Keiland, A. B. Carlson and R. A. Xulllam. Bark Row (Left to Rlgrht) Kdcar Shaw. Stanley Baker and W. C. Moore. (2) Front Row (Left to Right) C. Christenson, R. G. K. Cornish, James Tlbbetts and It. N. evrlln. Second Row (Left to Risht) J. W. Analey, L. R. Wheeler, Lieutenant-Colonel! J. K. AVerlein, Colonel; R. A. Randall, Lientenant-ColoneL Third Row (Left to Right) J. E. Stevenson, A. M. Grllley, Secretary; Chester Hogue, Harry Yanckwlch and B. Lee Paget. Fourth Row (Left to Right) Harold Jones, I. L. Riggs and C. B. Wintler. the balance of the building so that there can be no embarrassment of its occupants. If the' boys cannot pay, they are kept and opportunity provided to obtain positions which will put them on their feet. One of these kitchenette meals consists of a large slab of meat, beans, bread andbutter and chocolate and costs 10 cents. In the basement of the building a cafeteria restaurant is operated, where 750 meals are served each day. The average profit on a 25-cent meal is 1 cent, but so closely is the kitchen watched that it has been made to break even on expenses. In the gymnasium 1500 men receive instruction every week. Large num bers of Portland business men have organized classes which receive spe cial instruction according to the indi vidual needs of the members, from A. II. Grille. The physical department has a corps of physicians in attendance which would mean a roll call of the leading doctors of this city if their names were given. Examination is made of every applicant, and a chart is prepared from which the course of instruction is laid out. Many of the business men of the city make this physical devel opment feature a pleasurable lark, the fun hour of the day of business. The headquarters building- of the Y. M. C. A. of Portland contains men who are struggling to do something for themselves. They will be found assembled In the classrooms, where they may be wrestling with the Eng lish language, with mathematics or with some other branch of education. Other groups will be found in the rooms devoted to the mechanical trades, the laboratories, the electrical department or some of the scientific researches. One Makes Start as Xewsle. One does not often hear of the work that is being done for men of this character. It is here that Nick Flem ing, a carrier on a Portland newspaper and one of a family of 14 children, ob tained his start in the world. Nick I MAKE MEX. , I am a moulder of manhood. I take boys and younsr men In the plastic period and enlighten tnem- in the art of living fit them for -success by teaching them h-ow to be clean, strong, efficient. I am a trellis to which the ten drils of youth can cling in healthful, happy growth, avoid ing snarls and tangles due to ig norance, idleness, neglect. In an age notable for powerful allurements of. the forces of evil, I constantly present virtue in its true attractiveness. I mix mor ality with mirth, flavor disci pline with fun, and exalt always the glory of strength, physical, intellectual, spiritual. But two generations ago I was only a thought in the mind of a man. Today I influence for good a million members, touching every civilized nation, and grow ing srrowlns GROWING. I am a grain of mustard seed which grew Into a great tree, and the fowls of the air lodge in its branches. I am at work in Oregon, in the cities, in the colleges and in the railroad centers; among men and boys irrespective of position, nationality and color. I am anx ious to begin work with "the other 50 per cent" the Oregon boys in the rural districts. I am the YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION. AGAINST SEATTLE IN BIG YOUNG MEMBERSHIP CONTEST. i 'v. S - V4' .4 V I222?i25r3sJZZZ was born in Ireland and came to Amer ica as a stowaway. He reached Port land in a boxcar, and for several years supported himself and sent money to his Irish home by carrying and selling newspapers on the streets. Then somebody gave him an idea about doing something for the future. Nick Joined the Y. M. C. A., but had to have a Job to support himself while going to school. He got it on a milk ranch, and he studied his lessons with his book strapped to his knee while he milked with both hands. . Today Nick Fleming is with the Westinghouse people, and is belieVed to be one of the coming lights as an electrical engineer of America. Another Studies to Be Teacher. Here is another one. Eric Englund has just recently won the state cham pionship in oratory for the O. A. C. Eric was born in Sweden and came to live with an uncle in Texas. He saw no future for himself down there, and borrowed enough money from his uncle to come to the Northwest. He is another graduate of the dairy farm route through the Y. M. C. A. He is considered at O. A. C. to be one of the best-equipped students they have received in many years, and will be given, at the end of his next term, a certificate entitling him to terch agri culture. The Portland Y. St. C. A. has devel oped very strongly the idea of father-with-son association. They give many entertainments which father and . son attend, and the net result has been the development of a greater pride in each other. The father learns what the boy is doing, and the boy soon gets to know that dad is "some punkins" him self among his equals, so that it isn't very long until the best sort of com radeship is formed between the two. Mother-and-son dinners are being strongly encouraged also, so that the mothers may have the same sort of in terest that the father maintains. The Portland Y. M. C. A. is after the boys of the city. It wants the boy from when he is about 10 or 12 years old, at the time when he is most sus ceptible to either good or bad in fluences, when he might.be easily con verted into a criminal or started on the road to success. They are glad to get them from those ages up to 24. After 24 a man's habits are more or less fixed, and after that age they may be wasting their time in endeavoring to do something for him unless it be in an educational way. However, no man is rejected. One of the appealing features of the Y. M. C. A. organization for the younger class of boys is the camp at Spirit Lake, Wash., which is every year oper ated under the direct personal super vision of J. C. Meehan. It is near the base of Mount St. Helens in a beautiful location, is equipped With cabins and spacious park grounds, where baseball diamonds, tennis courts and so on are laid out. Strict Discipline Maintained. A strict discipline is maintained at the camp, the boys being called from their beds with a bugle, and retiring with taps in their ears at night. Every hour of the day is devoted to some use ful purpose. Last year the older boys from the Spirit Lake camp passed north from across Mount St. Helens and over the mountains to Rainier National Park and Tacoma, being the first party to ever make the trip so far as Is known The Portland Y. M. C. A. needs the support of every (business man in the city in the campaign which begins to morrow. It is not only necessary that Seattle be defeated in the contest, but there are several thousand young men of Portland who need this institution to be given an opportunity. The names of persons desiring to Join should be sent to General v oodward. ins com mitteo .will do the rest.. MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION V. i IT7TI b BIG EFFORT IS HEEDED COL. DAVIDSOS SAYS Y. M. C. A. HAS GOOD CHANCE TO WIN. Team Selected Carefully With Expecta tion That Each Man Will Go to Work at Once. "The team of Y. M. C. A. solicitors which has been lined up as the 'David son squad' has been individually se lected because of the degree of pep each man is able to put Into any under taking," said Colonel O. W. Davidson. "In this contest with Seattle, the Portland Y. M. C. A. will probably have to exceed the record of five years, made in 1915, when 1100 members were added, but it looks as though we could do it and dd it easily. "The people of Portland understand what a tremendous gain has been made by the thousands of young men who have passed through the educational courses of the Y. M. C. A. We have taken boys who could not speak the English language, and who did not have the first rudiments of an educa tion, and after a few months or years, have equipped them for practical life, or for entrance into the higher colleges. "The business men of Portland have long since been convinced of the value of this training, and we are going to rely on them to eive this campaisn a send-off by being ready to urge all of their employes to hand in their names the first thing Monday morning." COL WERLEIfJ IS READY Y. M, C. A. TEAM DETERMINED TO DEFEAT SEATTLE. Big Thing In Campaign, However, Is to Develop Men and Boys Through. Association, He Says. "Our boys have heard ' something about 'whaling the everlasting tar out of a man," " smiled Colonel Ed Werlein. "We have called ourselves the Woira ceas, an Indian name, which means get the scalp of the other fellow." In this particular case we will get two scalps. The first will be that of the Seattle Y. M. C. A, and the incidental one will be that of the insurrectos commanded by Colonel Davidson. "But the big thing in this fight is for the futures of the boys of Portland, and if Colonel Davidson can get more of them into the organization than can my bunch, then I will be the first to congratulate them. There are thou sands of young men in this city who need the Y. M. C. A. It means greater efficiency to them in their years of manhood, it means better citizens to the state. I want to show them, these boys, that there is a place in this town where they can have all kinds of fun while they are growing in mental and physical equipment. "I hope that every friend of mine in Portland will take a hand to the ex tent of sending in a few applications. They will be doing something for Port land. I won't kick if they even send them to Colonel Davidson. Judson Harmon, prominently mentioned as the successor to Secretary of War Gar rlson. used to earn spending- money by pick log blackberries. Q' I. 3 BIG BUSINESS AIDS. Y. NL G. A. WORK Streetcar and Drug Compan ies Offer to Advance Money for Employes. 7000 NAMES ARE GIVEN Teams Ready for Final Orders at Start of Campaign Tomorrow, "When Workers Will Go to Districts for Members. SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS OF FEHED. Business men's memberships 'will be sold for $25. payable In five equal monthly payments. Full senior memberships for boys over 18 years of age will be sold for $13, payable in three months. Boys' memberships cost $7, pay able in three months. Two big business firms of Portland yesterday electrified the klckoff meet ing of the Y. M. C. A. contest between Portland and Seattle by offering to advance the money for any of their employes who wish to Join the big in stitution of Portland. They were the Portland Railway, Light & Power Com pany, by Franklin T. Griffith, and Woodard, Clarke & Co. Each concern offered to fix terms for repayment to suit the salaries of the employes af fected. Then came the announcement that other business men had sent in names of 7000 employes whom they would like to see have the benefit of Y. M. C. A. training in some specific line. With that many prospects in view the teams of Portland are keyed up for a fight such as this city has never Been. - Final Orders Given Tomorrow. The' team, headed by Colonel Ed Werlein, is known as the "Woimcoas," and has adopted the red carnation as Its emblem. Colonel O. W. Davidson's team is known as the "Du Plunkx." which is explained to be French for $12. the discount price for a senior membership for a boy. At 10 o'clock tomorrow morning the teams will line up for final instructions at the Y. M. C. A. building, and each forenoon, of the following week will find the gangs of men in the field in the attempt to swamp Seattle. Three hundred boys have divided about equally between the two teams of workers and will wage a campaign for boys' memberships. They are headed by cheer leaders, and form one of the interesting features of the cam paign. They are youngsters from 10 to 12 years old, who are as loyal to the Y. M. C. A. as they are to their own homes. They are youngsters who are being started, in clean living and clean growing. Institution Operates at Loss. After all the enthusiasm engendered by the talks had been allowed to work along to the boiling point and men were ready to fight for the big in stitution at Sixth and Taylor streets, Harry W. Stone, general secretary, yes terday added the last bit of fuel re quired to keep them on edge when he said that the Portland Y. M. C. A. was being operated at a constant loss. For the past three years, according to Mr. Stone, the institution has been unable to break even on the expense account. More members are imperative, and members who will stick. The fighting squads announced their intention of going after that sort of membership tomorrow morning. The effort will be made to enroll more than was found sufficient to win the contest last year, 1100. EmplOTers Show Interest. "It ought to be plain to any young man our canvassers approach that his best interests will be served, by join ing the Y. M. C. A.," said Oeneral Woodward. "The fact that we have his name on a card should be encouraging. It shows that his employer has taken enough interest in him to watch his development, and it may be taken as IT'S YOUR LIVER! YOU'RE BILIOUS, HEADACHY, SICK! Don't Stay Constipated With Breath Bad, Stomach Sour Cold. or a Enjoy Life! Liven Your Liver and Bowels Tonight and Feel Fine. Tonight sure! Kemove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, breath offensive and stomach sour. Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy, constipated and full of cold. Why don't you get a box of Cascarets from the drug store now? Eat one or two tonight and enjoy the nu ast, gentlest liver and bowel cleans ing you ever experienced? You will wake up feeling fit and fine. Cascarets never gripe or bother you all the next day like calomel, salts and pills. They act gently but thoroughly. Mothers should give cross, sick, bilious or fev erish children a whole Cascaret any time. They are harmless and children lave them. Adv, . 1113 indicative of an interest in the future of the employe. "I hope that every firm in the city will follow the lead of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company In providing for the advancement of fees required to join the Y. M. C. A. and their refund in small sums as the em ploye can afford it. "Every business man in the city can take it from me that he will get the biggest returns from such action. He will be aiding his men to better their ability and to handle his business more profitably. He will be helping young men to help themselves in the future." SCALE LARCH IN FEBRUARY First Party of Season Led Up Moun tain, by S. Siebrets. A party led by Conrad Sieberts claims the distinction of having made the first trip , of 1916 to Larch Mountain. This trip was made February 19-20 and a second party was taken up the moun tain by Mr. Sieberts last Sunday. On the first trip there were nine in the party, and after spending several hours enjoying themselves on snow shoes and skiing two of the number went to the top of the now famous mountain. Because of the heavy snow it was impossible for the two success ful hikers to get into the cabin on top. and the second trip found the snow conditions even worse. The trail up Larch Mountain wa broken by the first Sieberts party on February 20, and this made it somewhat easier for the last ascension. The weather was good during the first jour ney, but a hard rainstorm last week caused the second squad to remain on the side of the mountain instead of going on to the top. The party which made the first at tempt to scale the mountain in 1916 was made up of Conrad Sieberts, Guy Thatcher, Anne Nichols. Edith Moore, Harry Hedean, A. J. Nelson, Claude Frohn, Clarence Diehl and Clarence Williams. 'Williams and Hedean are the ones who went to the top of Larch on February 20. according to Mr. Sieberts. RAILROAD ISSUES BOOKLET Milwaukee System Describes Electri fication of First Unit. Attractive booklets explaining in picture and in story the new main line electrification project of the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway are being distributed by E. K. Garrison, district freight and passenger agent for the road In Portland. Accompanying these booklets is the formal announcement that the Mil waukee's all-steel transcontinental train, the Olympian, operating between Chicago and the Pacific Coast, now is operated electrically between Three Forks and Deer Lodge, Mont., a dis tance of 115 miles. The Columbian, the other fast train of the system, will be similarly operated within a few weeks. This stretch of 115 miles is the first unit of the electrified district which extends from Harlowtown, Mont., to Avery, Idaho, a distance of 440 miles, across the great continental divide. COW THIEF IS SENTENCED Man AYlio Nearly Was Paroled Gets One to Five Xears. Instead of the parole that he came within a hair's breadth of receiving, Amos Jones, confessed cow thief, was yesterday sentenced to from one to Ave years in the penitentiary by Cir cuit Judge Morrow. The parole was about to be grantedSt the recommen dation of the grand jury, when Sheriff Hurlburt's deputies dug up Jones' rec ord, showing that he was still wanted in Sacramento for assault with intent to murder, and for burglaries, and that he had served two years in the reform school at Salem. The specific offense for which Jones was indicted was the theft of a cow from H. H. French. The animal was sold to a meat market and butchered the day of the theft. DOES YOUR STOMACH TROUBLE YOU? Mm 1 Wonderful StomachRemedy will cnange that Long fece! And One Dose Has Often Dis pelled Years of Suffering. Mayr's Wonderful Remedy can really be termed WONDERFUL. No matter where you live you will find people who have suffered with Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailments, etc., and have been restored to health and are loud in their praise of this remedy. 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Wind distends the stomach aud causes that full, oppressive feeling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the .deli cate lining of the stomach. The trouble lies entirely in the fermenting food. Such fermentation is unnatural, and acid formation is not only unnatural, but may Involve most serious conse quences if not -corrected. To stop or prevent fermentation and to neutralize the acid, a teaspoonful of blsurated magnesia, probably the best and most effective corrector of acid stomch known, should be taken in a quarter of a glass of water immediately after eating, or whenever wind or acidity is felt. This stops the fermentation and neutralizes the acidity in a few mo ments. Bisurated magnesia can be ob tained from any druggist. It enables the stomach to do Its work properly without being hindered by poisqnous gas and dangerous acids. Adv. firs Mi GIRLS! LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR 25c-Cent Bottle of "Danderin'.' Makes Hair Thick, Glossy and Wavy. 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