The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, October 05, 1919, SECTION TWO, Page 4, Image 28

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    TTTE SUNDAY. OREGON! AX PORTLAND, OCTOBER 5, 1919.
HDSFORD FINDS SLIP
L
D
"IS MR. DE VALERA IN THE GRANDSTAND?1
IT 0. II. C.
AND 32 VFARS A50
Pat startep
in 195 AT
'THE KID"
U.AS.
Enrollment for Classes Ap
proaches 1500 Mark.
Mrs. Constance Meyer Win
ner of Diving Meet.
GRANGE,-
TWll?UtG
FOR-
PHILADELPHIA
MANY FFESHMEN JOIN
FIGURES SHOW ERROR
Capacity of Gymnasium Tiivcil hy
Heavy Do ma nil for Yiirii'd
Instruction.
Correction Will Give Firl Place
to .Multnomah Woman by
Narrow Margin.
COURSE
IN DIl'G RECORDS
raniuR
WW? J- !PYORANSr,IANV0O
ilSa ' beat it;
1. 'i-Mkgm&e4
F.T HARRT EDDAS.
Euinie Field, famous diver of Ihe
Ixs Angeles Athletic club, was
f'ortland visitor yesterday. Field
has Just returned from a year's serv
l'-e in France. He is with the Charles
t'h&phn Moving Picture company and
1 combining business with pleasure
and will visit relatives in Spokane
for the next two weeks before going
south again.
Fields said yesterday that he would
r one of the Los Angeles divers
Ihe national Junior diving events
scheduled to be held under the aus
pices of the Multnomah club on No
vember II. Fields, with Happy Kuehn.
onstance Meyer and Helen Hicks,
i'ortland's famous divers. went
through his repertoire of dives at the
I'ortland nat. Judging by his work
it will make "Happy step to win the
Uurrls. All of the divers showed
wonderful form In their execution
3 esterday.
The most Important thin? In con
nection with the visit of young Fields
1.- some dope on the far western div
insr meet, for which, i'ortland swim-n,:r-
circles long have been waiting.
Mrs. Constance Meyer and Helen
Hicks of the Multnomah Amateur
Athletic club were contestants in the
far western swimming and diving
championships at Neptune beach. Ala
meda, on July 3 and 4. The results
of the diving were announced as Miss
Aileen Alien of the "Los Angeles Ath
letic club, first In diving; Mrs. Meyer
second, two-tenths of a point behind
Miss Allen, and Helen Hicks third.
.Mrs. Meyer lost her diving title to
Miss Allen in 191$. the national meet
being set ahead and Mrs. Meyer be
ing caught quite unprepared lost, al
though it was said in the south that
had she been in condition she would
have won.
Miss Allen then held the title and.
although Multnomah club staged the
national meet in 191S. Miss Allen
would not Journey north, giving as
her excuse that she was 111. Portland
fans naturally took an unusual
amount of interest In the far western
meet this year, for it was understood
that Miss Payne and Mrs. Meyer both
would compete and Los Anirelrs had
piepared Miss Allen to meet the na
tional champion and the former cham
pion. So the outcome of the diving.
while disappointing, was not wholly a
surprise, but that the score should be
o close caused a good deal of spec
ulation. After the meet Mrs. Meyer congrat
ulated Miss Allen and after promis
ing to "get" her next year asked the
Judges If she might have one of the
-.opies of the score sheets used in the
meet. This was granted and Mrs.
.Meyer brought them home for her
scrap book. O. J. Hosford. chairman
of swimming at Multnomah club,
asked Mrs. Meyer if he might see the
diving sheets that she hiid brought
home, as he would like to see how
both Miss Allen and herself had been
marked by the judges, who, by the
way, are national authorities on div
ing. This Mrs. Meyer gladly did and
w hile perusing the score Hosford dis
covered on the sheets a mistake in
multiplication of two points in favor
of Miss Allen. This would make Mrs.
Meyer the winner by six-tenths of a
point.
Hosford then placed the matter be
fore officials of the Multnomah club,
who immediately took It up with the
amateur athletic union officials in
San Francisco. The matter has been
cone over thoroughly and It is known
that the mistake was not intentional,
but Just the kind of a mistake that
anvone might make.
The fact that the Judge, whose
sheet was in error. Is one of the best
known Instructors in the country and
wholly impartial to either of the
divers, clears him of any suspicion
r intentional wronk. In the meantime
me medals for the meet have not
been awarded and the Multnomah
club officials have bidden their time,
knowing that the original score
rheets would have to be forwarded
to San Francisco from the head office
ol tne athletic union.
It was not until Fields blew Into
town yesterday, bringing word that
he had met Miss AlUn on the streets
of Una Angeles the day before he left
for i'ortland. and that she had told
him that in . visiting Portland he
mould see the far western diving
champion, and went Into detail with
him about how she had really lost
Instead of won the meet.
While no word has been received
officially by O. J. Hosford. the fact
that Fields knew about the matter
causes him to expect official an
nouncement of the outcome shortly.
The young girl swimmers are com
ing to the front by leaps and bounds.
Miss Thelma Finn. 16-year-old swim
mer of the Los Angelas Athletic club,
in a recent swim with Dorothy Burns
at 1 yards, finished a close second,
making the century in 1:13. This is
unusually f.ist time for a new-comer
and Miss Burns, by the way. Is the
world's outdoor recordist at this dis
tance. Helen Wainwright, 11-year-old c
quatlc wonder of the Women's Swim
ming association of New York, ac
complished the dangerous crossing of
Hell Gate in the East river. New
York. Many full grown swimmers
have attempted this feat and have
failed.
Bridgeport. Conn., has established a
Women's Swimming association for
the state of Connecticut. This is in
line with the announced intention of
forming swimming associations
throughout the country to co-operate
with the Amateur Athletic union.
Cf Ihin nan.l .
v i " - .. .. " " i,iiiui lance O
Portland aquatic circles is the an
nouncement from New York that
Charles Durborow of the Riverton
Yacht club has applied for the na
tional long distance championships
for both men and women to be staged
in the Delaware. Durborow, In talk
ing to O. J. Hosford. chairman of
swimming of the Multnomah club,
said that the Riverton club would not
bid for the event again. Multnomah,
on Hosford's return, put In a bid for
this event and figured that with Riv
erton out of the running they would
stand a chance. Hov the application
of Riverton will effect Portland's
chances Is not known. The annual
meeting of the Amateur Athletic
union of America will be held In No
vember, and It is then that the award
ing of championships will be taken
up. . '
yUw t I C ,rs
dwCNNATI VIA toHty IERR?
BY CHR1STT WALSH.
Faith an' there's only one thing
necessary to complete the settin.'
for the Donnybrook that's on be
tween Patrick and William. If
only we could o' got Mister de
Valera to umpire the series be
tween the Morans and the Glea
sons. upon me soul his duties as
president of the Irish republic
would be so peaceful, by compar
ison, that niver a worry he'd have
to his dieln' day.
Patrick Moran, a product of
County Kerry, and William Ulea
son, whose stock fought and
thrived In Tlpperary! Both were
born in the good old U. S. A., but
their parents came from the old
sod not so many years ago.
Will It be one red-hot series?
Will all the cunning, strategy.
BILLIARD TEST IS
XKW YORK TOl'KXAMKXT OF
FKKS FOOD FOIt TIIOIGHT.
Carefully Pluyed "System" Will Be
Compared With Brilliant
but Flashy" Styles.
NEW YORK, Oct. 4. For those who
make a deep study of the billiard
game, there Is much food for thought
and refection in the coming tourna
ment tor the national championship
to be held at the Astor hotel ballroom
October 20.
In the first place, the tournament
should show to some extent the ad
vantages and disadvantages of two
widely different general styles of play
the carefully played "systems" and
the sometimes erratic but none the
less brilliant styles. While the style
of each player differs greatly from
that of every other one. It Is still
safe to say that certain of them work
"toward a consistent, regular acquisi
tion of points rather than to depend
on flashes of speed to reach the cov
eted goal. The opposite Is true of
others who depend more generally
on brilliant spurts to put them over
the line.
There also should be a worth while
contest between the players of the
older school Sutton, Slosson and i
Morninestar. and those who follow
the teachings of the younger experts
Schaefer. Cochran and Yamada. with
Hoppe as the medium between the
two. The never-ending dispute as to
the comparative ability of the oldtim
ers. Schaefer, Ives, Vignaux and Cas
signol. can. of course, have no set
tlement now. and yet there will be
plenty of opportunity for those who
have seen the old masters to compare
them with the new in the coming
tournament.
Sidelights and Satire.
Ad Infinitum.
There Is a man In our town.
An ivory-head'd pup:
At 4 A. M. he mows his lawn
And wakes his neighbors up.
Luke McLuke.
There is a man in our town
The neighbors all condemn;
At dusk he starts his phonograph
And plays till 2 A. M.
Columbia State.
There Is a man in our town
Who should Le In the pen:
His neighbors plan to shoot him,
'cause
He keeps a guinea ben.
Macon Telegraph.
i
There is a man in our 'town.
A most unpopular guy:
He won't get up and walk the floor,
But lets the baby cry.
Roanoks Times.
There is a man in our town
We wish he were In Hades.
For he's always bcasting of
His conquests of the ladies.
Name Are Nominal.
Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens).
Dippy Dialogue.
Optirr.us Silllcjs says he owes his
success to the fact that he is not to
be denied.
Cyricus No. alas! he's only too
ti ue.
Titles for Twlos.
At aid Mutual.
It is becoming almost as hard to
get a square meal as it is to get a
square deal.
www
Reverse English.
Nod ox'.
Don't Imagine that a man is ap-
7 &im$iMj.
'M'j-'L.;JpYf I p 1 (
C 0'fP:$-w Shore- an' voOR-
clean sportsmanship, compressed
ginger, fighting blood and 25 years'
experience of those two smart
baseball leaders be rolled into
nine short games? I'll say it will.
The ayes have it. "
Both are known as wily chief
tains, resorting to every trick that's
square to win their game; both are
equally idolized In their home
towns and the respect and affec
tion enjoyed by each among his
players proves emphatically that
there can be companionship be
tween the "boss" and his men.
To compare these veteran fa
vorites is at once difficult and
easy. By seniority of age and
service Gleason might come first.
When Grover Cleveland first went
to the White House, Gleason broke
in with Philadelphia in the Na
plauding you when he claps his hands
over his ears.
No, Bonnie, the release of the many
provisions in the will of Andrew Car
negie will not appreciably affect the
high cost of existing.
Daffr'a Dally Definition.
Caddying (verb) "Holding the bag."
Life's I.lttle Ironies.
m F. Baker congratulating
Willi
Pat Moran.
The auto races at the Sheepshead
Bay speedway marked, we are told,
the close of a record-breaking season.
Likewise neckbreaking.
GI10 JO HAVE TEAMS
MULTNOMAH ATHLETES WILL
PLAY BASKETBALL.
Boxing, Wrestling and Baseball
Also on Programme of Former
Patriotic Organization.
The Multnomah guard, now become
social and patriotic organization.
has taken up athletics and will place
basketball team In the field, ac
cording to announcement of F. R.
Whittlesey, executive secretary of the
guard. Boxing and wrestling teams
will also be in the -field, and next
spring the guard will turn out a
baseball team.
An important meeting of the or
ganization has been called for this
evening at the headquarters In the
Chamber of Commerce building. The
meeting will be in the nature of
general get-together, to which all
members of the old guard organlsa
tion, as well as those enrolled in the
club. are Invited. colonel John
Leader, formerly of the University of
Oregon training camp, and President
Dan E. Bowman and others will speak.
'The Multnomah guard has taken
irp athletics with the same spirit that
characterized the old regiment when
It was In active service," said Mr.
Whittlesey. "One of the best gym
nasiums in the city has been secured.
Fifteen men are out for basketball
practice and many others are inter
ested in boxing and wrestling. Next
spring the guard will put a baseball
team in the field, and already some
of the most promising talent in town
has been signed up for this amateur
organization."
MANAGERS STICK IX TEXAS
Xot Likely to Be a Change on Any
Club, Says Advance Dope.
SHREVEPORT, Tex.. Oct. 4. Few.
if any, changes in the managerial
roster of the Texas league are in
prospect for 1920. Although the pres
ent season brought several new team
leaaers into the field, the list of direc
tors as it appears now will stand for
next year.
So far the only talk of a managerial
shake-up that has developed comes
from Galveston. Bob Tarleton. It Is
said, will be succeeded by someone
else when the clubs begin their cam
paign of preparation next spring.
Billy Smith already has signed for
another season. Al Bridwell will be re
tained at Houston. Jakey Atz' job at
Fort Worth is as long as he wants it,
Mike Finn probably will be tendered
another contract in spite of the fact
that he has done little or nothing
with the Aces, and Ham Patterson
will continue to own and manage the
Marines.
Doc White may continue as owner
and team director of the Waco Navi
gators, but that Is doubtful. He, Is
looking out for the financial end of
the game as well as directing the
team'a play, but the Job. It is said,
is too much for one man and it is
' r,Asc the
- w I , .
- PHI (.J. ICC?
THtrift. first
IN A
QUARTER,
US-A.
Count
tional league. That was 32 years
ago and they are still calling him
"Kid," a wonderful encourage
ment to some who ti ink they are
growing old. For perseverance
and heroic determination Gleason
has It on the world. From tt m to
team and league to league he has
drifted, but today, at the end of a
3-year pull, he has for the first
time delivered a pennant. Al
though it is Interesting to note
that a majority of the White Sox
boys give him all the credit for
the flag in 1917.
As to Patrick Moran, his spe
cialty has been in doing the seem
ingly Impossible. Slightly young
er than Gleason, he started playing
in 1895 and in 1901 broke in with
the Poston Nationals. He was
with the Hub team five years and.
practically a certainty that he will
seek a manager this winter.
Joe Mathes has been so successful
since he succeeded John McCloskey as
manager of the Oilers that there is
talk of tendering him the berth per
manently. If this comes about he
may retire from the playing end of
the game, for it has been clearly dem
onstrated that playing managers in a
league of the Texas' speed are not
successes. Arch Tanner, the only real
playing manager the league boasted
of this season, couldn't hold up both
ends of the game, and quit.
BILLIARD
STARS'
LINEUP
Seven or (he World's Leading Balk
line Players to Meet.
Seven professional balk-line bil
liard players have entered for the
national 18.2 championship tourna
ment, which is to begin here on Octo
ber 20. This and two other tourna
ments for three-cushion and pocket
billiard players are to be held an
nually, and the winner of each, in
addition to a cash prize, will be
awarded a trophy emblematic of the
championship. This trophy will re
main in the custody of the champion
for one year, but will revert to the
winner of the next annual tourney,
and it will become the personal prop
trty of any player who wins it three
times, not necessarily in succession.
Four of the entrants. William F.
HOUSTON, TEXAS, THINKS IT
DISCOVERED BILLY SUNDAY
Editor on Trip Through Northwest
Home About Evangelist Taking
HOOD RIVER, Or., Oct. 4. (Spe
cial.) Houston, Tex., lays claim
to having found Billy Sunday,
the baseball prodigy, and when S. J.
Mitchell, a staff writer for the Hous
ton Post, was here last summer with
the party of newspaper men attend
ing sessions of the National Editorial
association, he abandoned his fellows
for a day to come here and visit the
ranch of Mr. Sunday, now the inter
nationally known evangelist.
Mr. Mitchell, who says he was one
of Rev. William A. Sunday's first ad
mirers and press agents, having writ
ten baseball dope about him a quarter
of a century ago, writes as follows,
in his Houston paper, about his visit
here:
"The history of thrilling baseball
in Houston goes away back into the
'80s, when there was a cleanup made
In the Texas league, with Houston
easily on top. Everyone said, "You
can't beat 'em. They have a combi
nation with that guy Billy Sunday
holding the key, and he's worse than
a bulldog; he won't turn loose.'
Billy Taken by Majors.
"That's Just the way the opposing
cities, with their clubs, were talking,
and from that on they Just grew list
less, as far as any hope of making a
creditable showing was concerned.
"But the big leagues soon took
notice and plucked Bill Sunday away
from the Texas club, and he literally
took his second sack with him In his
campaign of aggressiveness that
made hi mpopular with everyone.
"Years rolled along and Billy Sun
day turned his second base into a
broader field of activity, and widened
it into a pulpit, from which he draws
as many, alone, as may be seen on
many a fine day at the New York city
Polo grounds. He was always Im
polite enough to discuss the equity of
a close decision with an umpire, and
his flow of language even at that
early date was the subject of admira
tion. He is pre-eminently the man
with a punch, and goes In but little j
for theological methods, claiming
that too much of it often mars or
obscures the truth.
"But with all the wear and tear on
( AN' O'CICOTTE AN' tfJACKSOAl w , J&ftfM -&v$yf Mltl 9
CANT SHMEAR- yOUR. X'f- ' y.J'-'x ?X f &
PLOOO? "RED STOCKING , m' 'MW 7. , .
s' t v r . n mxw vw j " - " - w-j
MAVO
although twice the premier catcher
in the National, it has not Deen by
playing that the name of Moran
has been emblazoned in baseball's
chronicle of heroes.
The Phillies are in the cellar to
tfay, a position they have occupied
with annoying consistency to the
native rooter. In 1911 along came
Pat Moran as a catcher. Slowing
up a little, he acted as coach In
1913-14 and the following year was
handed the reins of management.
From all that was known of the
Phillies it was like handing Pat
the reins of government in Rus
sia. But from a team composed of
a few misplaced stars and a make
shift roster he gave Philadelphia
a championship in the National
league, the first in 20 years. After
that he finished twice as runner-
Hoppe, New York: George F. Slosson,
Boston; George B. Sutton, Chicago,
and Ora Morningstar, have won na
tional 18.2 titles in past years. The
other three, Koji Yamada of Japan:
Jake Schaefer, son of the late Chi
cago veteran, and Welker Cochran, a
young western player who now resides
in this city, are classed as worthy
contenders in this division.
The schedule calls for 21 games of
400 points each.
Much Space Devoted to Sports.
Here are some figures regarding
the space devoted to sports by prom
inent British clubs: Ranelagh polo
grounds, 34 acres; Lords cricket
ground, 22 acres; Hampden park
(Glasgow), 20 acres (this athletic
stadium is enclosed and can accom
modate 150,000 people, all standing
or sitting on soldid earth banked to a
height of 60 feet from the surface of
the playing pitch); Sheffield United
ground, 20 acres; Stamford Bridge
(where the Chelsea soccer club plays).
16 acres; Kensington Oval, 12 acres,
and the Crystal Palace an Immense
park for sport.
"Flip" Decides Captaincy.
COLUMBIA, Mo.. Oct. 4. Anton
Stankowskl was elected captain of
the University of Missouri football
team, by Coach John Miller's flip of a
coin after the voting of "M" men re
sulted in a tie.
Writes When He Returns to His
Vacation at Hood River Ranch.
his constitution that so much stren
uous work must entail Billy must
have some relaxation, and he shows
another side of himself as a success
ful rancher in the Hood River valley
of Oregon. 'I am only granting the
devil a truce out here,' he said, 'while
I enjoy the pure air that blows from
snow-covered Mount Hood and acts
as a beneficial sleeping draught.'
"Sunday is nothing if not versatile,
and while he can sail away to the
heights of idealism, he is equally
successful in commercialing his work
In all his engagements he first has
to talk It over with .'Ma,' and this
means that his transactions will
terminate in a distinct compensation
for Billy.
Charity Abundantly Helped.
"But with all the wealth he ac
cumulates, much of it Is put to a good
and charitable use, and he often takes
the lead with a good round donation
to any worthy cause.
"It is, after all, the wonders of the
Witch mountain that allured Sunday,
just as many other natur- worship
pers have been chained in her entranc
ing spell. No one ever tires of the
mountain, for like a kaleidoscope it
never presents the same picture any
two hours of the day. It is like a
realistic painting on which some
Titan with an invisible brush and
easel pours out his inspirations in
the colors of nature.
"Now the sun may sparkle with a
brilliancy Indescribable on particles
of snow-tipped peaks and vast snow
fields and glaciers. The peak Itself
rises in the sky as limpid as a sylvan
lake where nymphs and gnomes come
to peer and mirror themselves for
their morning toilet. But In a mo
ment this view may pass. A sudden
cloud rolls together and throws its
shadow over the Witch mountain.
"It is tjie land of the nlmrod in the
fall season, and in its forests bear
and deer abound. Apple harvesting
Is a wonderful sight. One sees a
familiar auto truck, loaded with bow
ers of choice fruit and rumbling along
the paved roads to the own of Hood
River. The man at the wheel is in
definitely happy. He knows them all.
They all know him. He doesn't look
in the least ecc eslastlcal, but. it's
Billy Sunday Just the same." I
up and drifted to tha Giants as
assistant to Mr. McGraw. When
"Matty" went A. W. O. L. with
Garry Herrmann, Pat took the job
from all appearance and tradi
tion the proverbial joke assign
ment of baseball. -
For 50 years the Reds had
tried in vain. Never in the history
of the National league had Cin
cinnati won a pennant. And again
along came Pat Moran, the hyno
tizer of the Phillies, who in the
course of a half year has accom
plished what Cincinnati craved
for half a century.
One morning last spring, this is
what Boss Herrmann said to Pat
rick: "There are my 18 regular
players. All but twi' have been
discarded by other clubs. Can you
deliver me a pennant?"
WINGED T SMOKER SET
BIG
STAG EVENT ANNOUNCED
FOR OCTOBER 16.
Boxing and Wrestling Bouls Are
Planned as Featur? Club Bil
liard Tourney In Full Swing.
Paul Dickinson, chairman of the
entertainment committee of the Mult
nomah Amateur Athletic club, an
nounced yesterday that the big club
smoker will be held on the night of
October 16. The smoker is the big
stag event of the year, and Frank E.
Harman, chairman of the boxing and
wrestling committee, and Eddie
O'Connell, instructor of boxing and
wrestling, have been busy lining up
the best mitt and mat talent that can
be obtained for the occasion.
Besides the boxing and wrestling
there will also be a clever pro
gramme. Frank E. Harmar Is arranging for
an inter-club meet with the Spokane
Athletic club, to be held in Spokane
October 15. It will be the first of a
series of matches between the two
clubs for the championship.
One of the big events in boxing and
wrestling circles here this year will
be the tournament to be held In the
club gym on Thanksgiving eve, when
the Olympic club, Spokane Athletic
club, Vancouver and the Multnomah
Amateur Athletic club participate In
a boxing and wrestling meet.
The intermediate billiard tourna
ment at the Multnomah club Is now in
full swing and enthusiasts are watch
ing the results with a great deal of
Interest.
Rolla Gray, who has made the
highest run so far, 16, suffered a de
feat last week at the hands of
George Kennedy. Thirty-one games
have been played so far, leaving 24
more to complete the tournament. At
the close of the billiard tournament
the "star" pool turnament to decide
the club championship will be held.
Manv of the best players who fre
quent the club's billiard-room will
compete, and some brilliant playing
is expected.
Registrations for the fencing
classes which will be started later in
the season are already being made
with Temporary Chairman Jan . Kool
and Instructor Mauthe. Those who
wish to enter and get the preliminary
practice before the opening of the
season may leave their names with
one of these men.
Saber fencing will also be taken up
this year, the fencers having had foil
fencing before.
The Inter-club fencing contest will
take place in March. This Is the first
of its kind, but in all probability it
will become a permanent institution
with the club. A silver cup will be
given to the winner of the contest.
Right Off the Bat.
0'
N THE last day of the season in
Wichita Joe Wilhoit was pre
sented with a gold medal by admir
ing fans for his feat in breaking all
records for hitting consecutively.
Stock in the Red ball club is still a
commodity on the Cincinnati stock ex
change. It seems the club officials
got the idea that some of the stock
was being bought because the pur
chasers thought a world's series pass
would go with each share held, so a
rule was made that stock must be held
on a certain date to get a pass.
The luckiest ball player of the year
in Charley See, the young outfielder
bought by Cincinnati from Rochester
on recommendation of Gene McCann
and Arthur Irwin. He made them
give him a slice of the purchase price,
cot a good contract and now gets a
half portion of the world's series j
fMACfMC If CACAU
McGrauj and Jennings
ON TH5 SAMe TtAM
HEAVEN Protect dor umpires
That is up to the boys them
selves, 2"oran answered, in effect.
For when asked, as he has been a
hundred times, what he has done
to bring about Cincinnati's dra
matic revival, his reply is always:
"They have simply played the
game and I don't want any more
credit than you give my boys." In
Gleason there is found a perfect
replica, for while his tactics vary
in minor detail:, the secret of his
success has been the loyalty he in
spires among his cohorts.
As a sticker and a qultless vet
eran the honors go to the gray
headed "Kid" of Chicago. As a
producer of the miraculous phenix
in big league baseball, Patrick
Moran is the most picturesque fig
ure since the days of the original
Reds.
money. And he's played in only half
a dozen games and looked like a
fright in those.
Veteran Chicago fans who saw the
old Cincinnati Reds and the newly
shining Chicago White Sox play for
the "championship" of the then
known baseball world In 1870 made
the trip to Cincinnati for the world's
series, there to meet other veteran
fans who rooted for the 1S69 and
1870 Reds. It was some reunion and
it is to be hoped that the old fellows!
didn t fall out and fight.
George Stallings is said to be much
pleased with several of his recruit
braves. He particularly likes Ford,
the young collegian who Is being tried
at third; Carroll, the outfielder from
Memphis, and O'.Veill. the catcher who
comes from Rochester through the
New York Giants in the Nehf trade.
Ford played in the New England
league this year until that circuit
broke up. Nutter Is another new
comer with the Braves, but his work
has not been so impressive.
"TIGERS'
NAME TO LIVE
Football Team of Detroit Will Play
Under Ball Club Name.
DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 4. Even
though the Detroit Tigers have parted
company with Navln Field until base
ball Is resurrected In 1920, the name
"Tigers" will continue in use.
The university of Detroit football
ers will use the name in reference to
their eleven, which plays eight games
within thp walls of Navin field this
season. Coach Duffy has been ask
ing for suggestions from many per
sons for a nickname, but the best one
of all seemed to be "Tigers."
With so many other large univer
sities having adopted various names,
it was difficult to secure a nickname
without stealing one that was used
by another. The Detroiters have been
referred to quite frequently as th
Red and White, which colors have
been born by the university of Detroit
athletic teams for many years. But
after a session scanning all names
suggested, it was finally decided that
the Jefferson-avenue contingent would
be known in the future as the uni
versity of Detroit Tigers.
WRESTLERS' CLUB ORGANIZED
University of California Mat Men
to Meat Team From Stanford.
BERKELEY. Cal.. Oct. 4. A wres
tlers'' club has been organized at the
University of California and an effort
is to be made to have wrestling rec
ognized as a major sport at the uni
versity. California mat men will meet a
team from Stanford university and
matches are to be arranged with the
Olympic club of San Francisco and
other organizations.
E. C. Golden heads the wrestlers'
club and P. B. Kelly is manager.
Prince Honors Golfer.
flllie Freeman, golf professional of
the Lambton club, Toronto, has won
many prizes on the links, but iie has
a little remembrance that he prizes.
During the visit of the Prince of
Wales to Toronto he visited the
Lambton club and played a round of
golf with Freeman, carrying the
clubs, and a few days later received
a tie pin engraved with the royal
feathers of the prince on a crown,
and below the letter "E."
Town Baseball Mad.
A boom town in Oklahoma named
Oilton has gone crazy over baseball.
It has contracted with Walter John
son and Ty Cobb to appear there on
October 12 and play with its town
team against a rival. Sam Agnew
will go along to catch Johnson. After
this little stunt Cobb will go to Au
gusta to look after a new business
he has gone into. It's an automobile
th e concern.
ORRfinv Mirtici'i ti -i? m it
LEGE, Corvallis, Or., Oct. 4. (Spe
cial.) According to James Arbuth
not, professor of physical education
at Oregon Agricultural college, this
year marks a record in men, regis
tered in the department of pliMc;il
education. Including the men who
are turning out for Intercollegiate
and freshman football. Ihere is :i
grand total of 1478 men taking this
work, in one form or another.
Of this number, by far the greatest
majority are freshmen, there being
750 of the new class, which is over
half of the total. There are ;trn
sophomores and the upper classmen
and vocationals, who are classed to
gether in gymnasium work, number
250. Besides this, there are S.0 fresh
men turning out for football, and IS
for the varsity team.
Other Clae Offered.
Besides the work offered in foot
ball there are regular classes In
wrestling, boxing, cross-countrv. soc-
1 ter and gymnasium work. Of tliet-e
different varieties of physical exer
cise boxing leads In the contest clas-i
with 213 men signed up. wrestling is
next with 174, uross-coiititi-y follow
ing with 138 and soccer with 70. Seven
hundred and fifty-five have signed up
to take the regular gymnasium vvoiii.
which consists of work on the paral
lel bars, rings, gym horses and setting-up
exercises.
Plenty of equipment is on hand to
take care of the men interested in
boxing, there being a large number of
pairs of gloves which were used by
the men during the S. A. T. C. at the
college last year.
More Equipment .Needed.
At the present time there is only
one wrestling mat on the floor, but
efforts are being made to get addi
tional equipment for this sport, and
it Is likely that there will be two new
mats within the next week or two.
Professor Arbuthnot, who is wrestling
coach at the college, will oversee the.
work In this department.
With the number of men who are
enrolled. It is taxing the capacity ol'
the large gymnasimu to take care of
them. Lack of lockers for the dressing-rooms
is the most serious, and
every locker in the place is being
used by two men, and in some cases
more than that. Every man is re
quired to put in two hours each week
In whatever line he has signed up
for.
New showers have been instatle.l
and a larger tank put in Cor hot
water. This is a corrective exercise
room, which has special apparatus
designed to aid men in righting
physical defects.
CHICAGO ATHLETE IS CO.MEIS
T. G. Ross, Football iiml Swim Mint,
to Live in lluc City.
Thomas G. Ross, well-known I'hi
cago athlete, is now residing in I'ort
land. He was for three years on tit -all-Illinois
basketball team and played
football with l-akeview Inch m liool
Ross enlisted in the 1'nliecl State
navy In 191S and was stationed at
tiie Great Lukes naval training- sta
tion, where he was a member of H e
famous football team of the station
and also a member of the basket
ball team.
Ross is also a swimmer and diver
of note and will bo a valuable man
to Multnomah club. In his home
town, Chicago, Ross is known ns Hm
only student who ever made 1 ti let
ters during his school term.
Sox Get Winn Noyes.
The White Sox have taken Pitcher
Winn Noyes off the hands of Connie
Mack. The jump from a tailender to
a champion is all honor, however,
for Noyes is not eligible for the
world's series games.
OE3QI iononr
Automobile Accessories J
o
D
AND TUBES AT
Reduced Prices
30x3 Nun Skid..
..$ 0.85
S 30x3'. Non Skid..
1 12 li
n 32x3!2 Non Skid J4.ll Q
o 32x4 Non Skid 18.S2 O
33x4 Non Skid 19.72
34x4 Non Skid 120.11
Overcoat
D
o
At Reduced Prices.
Take the car home from the
one best workingmen's store.
WOOSTER'S
O 48!
488 to 494 Washington St.
Open Evenings
I0E30I
Horse Races
Vancouver, Wash.
OCTOBER 10, 11, 12
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Running and Harness
4 Races Daily
General Admission. 5Tic; Grand
stand, 30c; Machines, 25c.
Francis Miles C.
Return home. Mother grieving, (jj
You can go to work here, jj
DADDY. a