4 THE SUNDAY OREGOMAN, PORTLAND, JULY 4, 1920 ILLY SUNDAY CAST EOF Baseball Evangelist Due to Work at Hood River. CITY TEAMS GET ACTION July 4 Dates to See Most All Local Nines Engaged In Out-of-Towi Games. Intercity League Standings. W. Honeyman Hardware Company. 6 ' Shflrwood 6 Klrkpatrlck Stars 4 Portland Iron Works 4 Hlllsboro American Lefrlon 4 Cfcniral Ioor & Iumoer Co..... 4 Astoria Centennials 2 Multnomah Guard 3 Camas Blues 2 Hood River American Legion... 3 "AA" City League. Arlela W. O. W 6 Crown Willamette (Oreiton City) 3 Hesse-Martin Iron Works 4 Ftreetcarmen's Local .......... 4 Kendall Station 2 Union Pacific System 3 Taylor Motor Car Company.... 2 Columbia Park 2 Battle Ground, Washing-ton. . . . 1 American Can Company 1 "A" City Leans. Co. A. Engineers. O. N. G 6 Oresronians 8 Oswego Olds, Wortman & Kinff Council Crest Bruins Cook & Gill Co Seliwood I'ark Fields Motor Car Company Capitol Hill Oregon Cltl Woolen Mills Co.. Nationals Some 4 2 odd baseball teams affili ated with the Portland Baseball asso ciation are taking advantage of July 4 celebrations in near-by tnwns to get away from the Portland sandlots to clash with out-of-town opponents to day and tomorrow. Among the near by cities that will draw heavily upon local semi-pro fans for attendance is Hood River. This afternoon the league-leading Honeyman Hardware nine will clash with the strong Apple Picke- .' com bination, while tomorrow, as a feature of the July 4 festivities, the Multno mah Guard team will be opponents of the Hood River nine. It is hard to determine which will be the main at traction in the game tomorrow the two teams or Rev. Billy Sunday, evan gelist of world-wide renown and for mer ballplayer, who will umpire. Rev. Mr. Sunday, who Is at present at Ta eoma. Wash., will make the trip from the Tacoma Speedway to Hood River by airplane tomorrow. Fans who have witnessed him in action on the ball diamond say that It is a rare treat to watch hisj antics as an umpire. fiilly Sandfly to Umpire. President Routledge of the Port land Baseball association wishes to correct a statement that has been cir culated of late to the t.i'cct that Sun day will umpire the game between Honeyman and Hood River today, which Is not a fact, as he will umpire tomorrow's game only. Panny Shea will hold the Indicator in the contest this afternoon. A par: e, band con cert and open-air boxing bouts will be other features of the celebration at Hood River tomorrow. A large delegation of guardnmen are expected to make the trip from Portland to root for their team, while Si Simonsen, secretary of the Port land Baseball association, will lead a large party of fans from The Dalles. Astoria t Get Action. The Portland Iron Works will eet Astoria In a double-header at the lower Columbia river city this week end. Today they clash with the Cen tennials at Astoria, while th - game tomorrow will be played at Seaside. The Multnomah Guard team will get in on two celebrations, as they play Hillsboro today, going to Hood River tomorrow. Bill Heales' Klrk patrick All-Stars are playing a three game series with Biddy Bishop's Sen ators at Salem. A fast contest is promised i:. the class AA circuit this aftsrnoon, when Crown Willamette tackles the league leading Arleta team on the latter's home field. Among the Independent teams playing under P. B. A. book ings the contest between the Knights of Columbus and Eastern & Western Lumber company promises to be in teresting. Teams in the class A city league and class A-l circuit are taking to day off, but will resume their regular schedule next Sunday. The regular weekly meeting of the P. B. A. will be held Tuesday instead of Monday this week. A fine of 25 cents per ,day will be assessed all managers "who fail to turn in box scores of their games at the meeting toiiowing tne oay of the game. One of the most reliable and hard est working ballplayers in the Inter City league is Arnold "Nig" Boytana, stellar first eacker of the Portland Iron T'orks club. His fielding has been close to perfect, and the way he nas been covering the sack is remark able. These features, coupled with his hitting ability and splendid throw ing arm, make him one of the most valuable players on the iron workers payroll. In a recent game at Sher wood he stretched full length on the ground fielding a bad throw and wnue in mis position tne runner stepped on his ankle, cutting to the bone, tie showed his grit by sticking in tne game, playing like r second Hal Chase RED TWIRLERS MAKE HOLLER Sal Ice and Eller Say Their Work on Mound Is Handicapped. CINCINNATI. Or., July 3. Claim ing that the new pitching restrictions are Illegal and improper, and that they have both had their effective ness completely ruined by these new rules. Slim Sallee and Hod Eller, the star pitchers of the Reds, have asked for a modification of the code. Eller asserts that his "shine" ball is not illegal, and Sallee insists that his use of resin, merely to dry his hands before pitching, is not a viola tion of any law. Both, so they set forth, have been practically barred from the pitching bill this season; both are all at sea without the de vices they used for so many years, atvd both point out that the Cincin nati clirb Is greatly handicapped by their inability to win ball games. Lack of Funds Hampers Boxers. A gift of 20.000 francs by sportsmen for the training of amateur boxers to represent France in the Olympic games at Antwerp this summer was announced recently in Paris. This has put new spirit into the contestants, who are meeting for the elimination matches. It is intimated other gifts will follow. There has been much pessimism in French sporting circles as in 5reat Tlritnin because of the lack of funds to properly prepare teams in all sports. DDL UMPIRE :;4 ! ' - ' V 'fel :N &'aZ - i M . 1 - ;:u 1 - y i. . -f JEM Ml f-4 1 1 . - rM't" ' a, vi 5 :8S? t " i Ut ill, v . f v5fOT, n I J--vtt --:- 1 ( 1 i jus 1 UrTr u,Jr . i i , i si v - 1 n-n-j v- vrrr ' 1 ' " , . ... t.s ju,r - nrnrim i r.no ...mi rnn F .'".r .Y " " ,-5iL T.- T ? v- L rLHI Ibfl LlAUj HUHLLnb Eicm;.: ANGELS' CHtCKER . HAS WINS AND 3 LOSSES. Sutherland of Portland Beavers Ranks Fourth With 1 1 Vic tories and 5 Defeats. Bill Pertica, the Los Angeles club's star chucker with 13 victories and only three defeats, Is once more out in front of the coast league hurlers with btroud of the bait LAKe Bees a close second. "Suds" Sutherland of the Beavers, is ranking fourth, with 11 wins and five defeats. Following are the standings up to the series of the past week: w. Pertica. l.os Angeles 10 Cullop. Salt Lake 6 Stroud. Salt Lake 13 Shollenhack, Vernon 10 SUTHERLAND, Portland.. 11 Dell. Vernon 12 O. Crandall. Los Anjceles... 8 SCHROEDER, Portland 4 Hromley. Salt Lake 6 Couch, i3an Francisco 11 Keatins. Los Angeles 7 Thursfon. Salt Lake 7 Fromme, Vernon 5 W. Mitchell. Vernon 11 R Arlett. Oakland 12 f'iercy, Vernon 6 Dcmaree. Seattle 6 McQuaid. San b ranclsco. . . . 3 Penner. Sacramento .......10 Scott. San Francisco 8 Love. San Francisco 4 KALLIO. Portland 4 JONES. Portland 5 Koas. l-'ortianci o Leverenz. Salt Lake 6 Holllng-. Oakland 9 10 Lewis, San Francisco 8 9 iearv. Seattle 7 8 Gardner. Seattle 8 AKiriGfre, los Angeies. . . . , . n Prough. Sacramento 6 Schoor. Seattle 5 Thomas, Los Angeles ......11 Reiser, Salt Lake 4 Kremer, Oakland 6 Fittery. Sacramento 7 Malls. Sacramento 8 Baum. Salt Lake 4 Smallwood. Vernon ........ 8 POLSON. Portland 4 .Il'NEY, Portland 4 Slebold, Seattle 4 Mouek, Vernon z Raeon. Oakland 2 OLAZ1ER. Portland 1 Devliales. San Francisco... 1 Jordan, San Francisco...... 3 Brown. Los Aneeles 8 Krause, Oakland .......... 4 10 Winn. Oakland 2 6 Kuntz, Sacramento 2 6 Brenton, Seattle 8 11 Woodward, Seattle 0 Hughes. Los Angeles 0 Schneider, Vernon 0 mnenart. Seattle I Weaver. Oakland 0 BATTERS CLAMOR FOR JUSTICE Over Fence Ball Rule Is Cause of Change In Heart. Umpires are queer mortals. Some times they do not know their own mind. Last, winter Billy Klem and Hank O'Day appeared before the rules com mittee and asked that the rule gov erning drives hit over the fences be amended .to read: "Where the ball goes over" in place of "where it last disappears from view." At their in stigation it was incorporated in the new rules and all umpires breathed a sigh of relief, as it was legislation the arbiters had clamored for for quite a. while. But were these licensed burglars satisfied for any length of time? They were not! When howls started to follow one another in rapid succession they cried that the new rule be stricken out and the old rule to govern and a recent meeting of the heads of both the American and National league decided to go back to the old rule. It is true that under the old rule there is no ground for argument, but the batter is not getting justice. Many times the ball clears the fence. but when It disappears from view it is foul. The Pacific Coast league has not gone back to the old rule. BEZDEK PtPILS IX DEMAXD Penn State Players Get Berths as Southern Coaches. STATE COLLEGE. Pa.. July 3. It is quite a tribute to a football coach's ability when the graduating members of his team are sousTit after by other colleges to coach their gridiron sqirads. Three of Coach Bezdek's champion eleven of last fall have been engaged to tT-.. in three dif ferent southern institutions, where they will carry the Penn State mentor's ideas of clean football and hard play. The trio of former blue and white stars to enter the coaching field are ex-Captain Bob HIggins. Ben Cub bage and Larned Conover. They will go to West Virginia Wesleyan, Vir i J ginia t-oiyiecnnic ana (Jiemson Co lege, respectively. 7 .462 45 6 .454 29 9 .450 31 6 .444 40 8 .429 40 10 .412 60 12 -.400 6!) 6 .400 46 6 .375 24 7 .364 36 7 .864 38 8 .833 38 4 .333 17 4 .333 2.8 2 .333 6 2 .333 22 7 .300 26 7 .800 31 .26 26 .250 21 .250 88 .214 40 .000 3 .000 13 .000 13 .000 18 .000 20 1 FIVE YOUNGSTERS WHO HAVE JOINED BEAVERS WITHIN LAST FEW WEEKS. VC KUaV-, VC ' WV-H n EORGB L- ("TEX") RICKARD ,W:3& y. : - X. ,-T r-&aT-; r-fe.'? lit -r once Texas rancherMater boxing I nf - - 6 .647 S' - if 4 .A3II 20 " . " j 4 .3 38 l ' ' ' 7 .612 8 v ?aV . . !Bir5,v . ' Jio. i 4 .600 12 -- , ' , - V-rf' f - t :S!S ;8 " - J (-, ; 7 -5S8 40 - - . . 6 .R72 45 , . - - 3 .572 16 i 4 '.555 29 . - .500 27 . J 6 .500 48 . - ' .470 34 ' , ... ,..-,...,.,. v. - ' ' ..- .467 2R 1 1 KA IE 91 Ml VJ Uf Top, .left to rlKtat Harold Brooks, Walt McCredle'a "mysterious" young horler Kalil to hail from nomewh rxe In Montana Pitcher Gluzler, turned over to Portland by Detroit) Inflelder McNsb, younjg Los An Kelrs recruit) Catcher McMullin, recalled to the Beavers froim Vikliua. Bottom Catcher Frank Tobin. obtained from Vancouver, B. C vrho ia ftlllns the breech on Portland's crippled receiving; staff with Boas Walter looking; him over. FORMER HEAVYWEIGHT CHAM PION IS IN BEST OF CONDITION Jack Johnson Tells Newspaper Men He Has No Intention of Crossing American Border Expects to Continue Residence in Mexico. di nrtr SAN FRANC clal.) I've a number BY HARRY B. SMITH. FRANCISCO, July 3. (Spe- e talked this week with of Los Angeles news paper men who have had a chance to see Jack Johnson at close range In Tijuana and to talk with him. One and all, they corroborate stories com ing to me some weeks ago. They say Johnson is far from fat; that he keeps in good trim, and does not seem to dissipate. ' One of them told me a story anent the reports that Jack planned to cross the border and give himself up to I the United States federal officials. I The newspaperman asked Johnson if there was any truth in the report. Jack looked him straight in the eye, and replied: "You don't see anything crazy about me, do you? Well, any time you hear that Johnson is going to cross over into 'the United States and take a jail sentence, you will know he Is roaring mad. No, I don't pro pose to do any such thing." Which is likely close to the truth. Unless plans go amiss. Johnson is to box Al Norton, a coast light heavy. Veight, in Tijuana Monday. Norton has done more or less boxing in these parts but Is not to be consid ered a top-notch scrapper by any means. Indeed, unless Johnson has Cone so far back that you wouldn't see him through a telescope, he ought to win from Norton without any dif ficulty. Some moving picture publicity peo ple were telling me of one they tried to "frame" that might have caused a sensation had it gone through. They suggested to Mack Sennett that he send one of his companies across the line into Tijuana to take some pic tures. It was the plan to have a lot of the Mack Sennett comic cops. The theory was that Johnson would be interested in seeing what was do ing- and hang around. Then they would seize the big black and escort him into the United states. Federal officials were to have been advised so they could gather in "Lil" Arthur and send him to jail. Sennett refused to consider the proposition and that was the end of it. But what an international row could have been stirred up had tire moving picture man consented to take chance! Mo question as to the publicity, but it might have proved expensive in the long run. . Another fight club Is trying to brave the storm in San Francisco. A neighborhood organization known as the D. and H. club opened its doors last Monday night at Sixteenth and Guerrero streets, out in the Mis sion. Reports have it the attendance was slim, and while the promoters may try" again, they are more than likely to be discouraged. Four fight clubs are running at present and that is quite a sufficiency. Speedball Hayden. negro scranner from Arizona, made his first appear ance here last week. He was sent against Steve Dalton. Steve isn't a star boxer, but he can take a lot of beating. That's exactly what he did at the hands of Hayden. The negro looks to have a lot of the tricks of the game, and I doubt very much wnetner ne snowed us everv-thinsr h knows in his first appearance. Fred Murphy, farmer Olympic club lad, made his first comeback since he was knocked out, recently. He took on Sammy Pelsinger and be it said that Fred was lucky to get a draw. Fighting is not a business for Murphy, who Is as clean cut a lad as you would wish to meet, and if he takes the advice of his friends, he will. sell his equipment, and stick to the real estate game. Frankle Farren made another of his good fights at the Coliseum, when ne won about as he pleased from Willie Hunefeld of Los Angeies. nuneieia nas won a number of bat ties nereaDouts, and looked so good tuey maue nim a iavorite over Farren. Frankie, true to promise, took a cnance at leading, and it was quite suiucient to give mm the honors. Reeves In Gibson Camp. Jack Reeves, former San Francisco middleweight boxer, whp has been campaigning in the east, writes that l:e has placed himself under the man agement of Billy Gibs'on, the gent wno guides Benny Leonard, light weight champion. Reeves is matched to box Len .Rowlands in Tulsa, Okla, on July o. ana may meet Curly" Smith in Wichita Falls, Tex., on July 8. After ht ebouts he will return to San irancttco. TEX" RICKARD MOST PICTURESQUE FIGURE Speculation Is Rife as to Age and of Boxing promoter, still later oil man and South American cattleman, but al ways infatuated with the glove sport, is probably the most interesting fig ure in the sporting world today. There is no use in displaying the im pertinence necessary to learn the ex act awe of Rickard, and, besides that, there is little use in trying to dis cover how old this dynamic, ever ac tive promoter de luxe of the glove wielding game really is. He's older than he looks and he's older than he acts and that should be sufficient in formation on this point for any in quisitive fan. Burdened with the reputation of being the greatest promoter of fistic evnts in the world seems not to an noy Rickard at all.- While the thatch which crowns his head isn't as thick as it once was. it is not due to wor rying. He's got that way just like many another man. "lit Thinks on Ills Feet." Rickard did not wear the thatch thin by thinking In a short bed, for he's not the fellow to "sleep over" matters that concern him. He is fully capable of doing his thinking whlie afoot, and last week he gave ample evidence of this in a" conversation concerning the possible matching of World's Heavyweight Champion Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier, the champion of Europe. While "Tex" simply dotes on the cattle business, for he has about the biggest ranch in the world in South America, a ranch on which there are something like 20,000 head of cattle, it would take a great stretch of im agination to make one believe that his enthusiasm over the said ranch is stronger than for the boxing game. There isn't the gamble and there isn't the excitement (for Rickard) in the ranch business that there is in the glove game. And, regardless of all the stories which reach print that Charles Cochran of London and other promoters of this and other countries are going to pit Dempsey against Carpentier, one need not be surprised when the time is ripe to learn that the man who is promoting the inter national world's championship Is none other than "Tex" Rickard. His Keynote Ia Action. As this was meant to be a word picture of Rickard, perhaps a few more paragraphs should be written about the man and his way of occu pying his time. "Tex" has been called a "human dynamo." He's that all right, for he's always speeding at high tension, doesn't sit long enough on one chair to warm it and talks or listens intently. But "action" is the one thing he must have and. he does have it In doses larger than the aver age man Is accustomed to take. It may or it may not be interesting Information for the layman to know that Rickard is one sport man. In other words, he is "cuckoo" over box ing. He likes the glove sport Just as well as the most .rabid baseball fan likes the diamond game. The writer asked him the other day: "How about other sports, such as baseball, etc.? Do you like them?" "Can't say that I do," answered : - Johnny Vldahof, Portland wres tler, who la home after an IS-monlhs' tour. IS SPORTDOM'S Other Characteristics of Best Known Promoters. Rickard. "I seldom go to a baseball game, because I don't really get en thusiastic over the game. Guess could say the same, too. for othe sports. Makes Htm Ntrvonn, Tex' couldn't sit through nine In nings of baseball. He's too loaded with nervous energy to permit it. When one talks "fight" to "Tex he listens with polite attention, fo one of the things he likes to do is to get a varied viewpoint. For instance he asked one of his friends the othe day: "What do you think of a Demp sey-carpentier contest?" I think It will be a one-punch fight," replied the friend. ."When Dempsey lands, the fight will be over. What do you think. 'Tex'?" "Well, I've been thinking -that Car pentier, who Is a mighty clever fel low, may be able to keep away from Jack and escape contact with th heavy wallop," said Rickard, "but per haps you are right. mats about as close as any on can get to a definite opinion from Rickard on the outcome of a scrap But Rickard is perfectly willing to be quoted that a Dempsey-Carpentie championship bout is an attraction o caliber to draw a big gate. He ought to know. WRESTLER VIDAHOF BACK PORTLAND ATHLETE AT EXD OF 18 MOXTHS' TOUR. Japan, China, India, Holland, Eng. land, France and Eastern Coast of V. S. Visited. John Vid.hof, one of Portland's few wrestlers it note, returned home last week after an 18 months' tour of the world during which time he visited Japan, China, India, Holland. Eng land, France and the eastern coast of the United States. Vidahof came to America from Fin land in 1914 and landed and settled In Portland. He took up the grap pling game at the Portland Y. M. C. A. and gained his first knowledge of the art from Ad Garlock, who Is now associated with Frank Kendall in the management of the Olympic gymna sium. At that time Garlock was wrestling and boxing instructor at the Y. M. C. A., a position which he held for several years. Vidahof, a strong, husky youth, proved an apt pupil and after a ses sion of training took part in his first professional match, meeting Eddie I O'Connell at the old Rose City Ath letic club. Although he had never previously taken'part In a real match he held his own and Eddie was unable to throw him after two hours of tus sellng, having to be satisfied with the decision. After a rest Vidahof took part In several more matches, winning them all. He signed up on one of the out going vessels here 19 months ago and got his fill of a sailor's life. John spent nearly a month in Japan, durfng which time he appeared in several matches and learned a number of new tricks from the wily sons of the orient. From Japan he went to China, thence to India, and on to Rotterdam, Holland. After visiting England and France he set sail for home, touching at New York and .New Orleans. Vidahof is weighing around 148 pounds and is in excellent condition. He will train throughout the summer and next winter and plans on making a strong bid for top-notch honors in the wrestling game. Coast Weight Men Show Well. The performances in the New York track events all through were only mediocre. The times made have been better in every event in the various Pacific coast A. A. U. championships. In the field events, notably the ham mer and 56-pound weight, the New York performances beat anything done on this coast this season. Ryan won the hammer with 170 feet 11 inches and McGrath took second with only 149 feet 1H4 Inches. When we look at J. McEachern's 165 feet and Jack Merchant's 165 feet the coast men are not far behind in the ham mer event. MeEachern is a San Francisco Olympic club man and Mer chant hails from Marshfield. Or., and is a student at the University of California. MEASURING OF CUP YACHTS DIFFICULT acers Soon to Go Through Complicated Ordeal. NEW RULES ARE INVOLVED Expectations Are Challenger Will Be Compelled to Give Time to Defender. NEW YORK. July 3. Just prior to the starting of the first race for the America's cup this month off Sandy Hook. Shamrock IV, the challenger, and the American defender of the historic trophy will be towed to a south Brooklyn shipyard for official measurement. This is a very impor tant feature of the big contest and one that is going to create consider able trouble. Upon the outcome of the measurement will depend the time allowance that will exist between the craft. No one knows what this al- owance is going to he, although all who are familiar with the situation state that the challenger will have to give time to the defender. It is going to be an exceedingly difficult task to measure the cup achts. For the first time, the big race will be sailed under the univer sal rule of measurement. The rule reads as follows: ' Yachts shall be rated for classi fication and time allowance accord ing to the following formula: 18 per cent of the product of length, multi plied by the square root of sail area, divided by cube root of displacement." Rule Is Complicated. This Is an exceptionally compli cated rule and one that only yacht designers understand. For the past 30 years in all of America s cup races the measurement of a boat for time llowance has been one-half of the sum of the load-water line length and the square root of sail area. In 1903 and previous years Messrs. Mower and Hyslop simply measured the deck length of a boat, dropped a plumb bob line from each end into the water, floated a batten in under the bow and under the stern, measured on the batten the distance from the plumb line to the end of the water line, forward and aft, and substracted the sum of these two measurements from the deck length. That gave them the load-water line length. The sail area was measured according to arbi trary methods, but it was assumed to be, and very nearly was. the measure ment of the area of the sails. To determine the square root of this area was a simple matter and one sum in addition and one in division deter mined the rating of the boat. This was the formula even in 1903, although the measurements of boats for other races of the New York Yacht club of that year were made under a rule very similar to the one now In force, but this rule having been adopted early in 1903, and the challenge for the cup races of 1903 having been accepted In. the fall of 1902, the old rule of measurement pre vailed in the last cup race. Various Teats Xecessnry. This year, however, the measuring of the yachts will be more compli cated involving a lot of calculation. The load-water line will be meas ured as heretofore and then the quarter-beam length will be ascertained. This dimension is used as a corrective of the load-water line and it must not without penalty be more than a certain percentage of the load-water line length. For a boat of 76 feet water line, the dimension fjxed by the challenger, this percentage will be slightly over 91 per cent. Should it exceed this percentage, one-half of the excess will be added to the load water line length, in order to con stitute the length factor in the calcu latlon for rating. In addition there will be various tests to ascertain whether the builders have made any concave curves or notches in the lines of the hull for if so certain penalties are provided. While quite different from that of years ago the method of measuring the sail area is really a method of ascertaining practically the area of the sails. These two measurements, the length factor and the sail area factor may of course be taken while the boat is in the water. The really new feature of the measurement of 'the cup yachts, however, will be the measurements taken to determine the spacing. The rule governing this reads: "Displacement to be obtained by weighing or as follows: The load water line shall be divided into ten, equal parts and the area of the im mersed cross-sections found in square feet. From these areas the load-water linelength the displacement in cubic feet shall be calculated by Simpson's rule." As It Is impossible to weigh a cup The Meekbigss' Reels Steel Fishing Rods mngiisrier ouk risrung Lines racer the area of the immersed cross sections must be determined. In order to do this it becomes necessary to place the boat in drydock, after the first mark in the water line not only at the bow and stern, but all the way round, the vessel is allowed to settle on the blocking as the water is drawn off so that the load water plane should be horizontal. If one were to erect a perpendicular wall at the side of the boat, parallel to her center line, and then measure at intervals equal to one-tenth of the load-water line length horizontally, and. sy at intervals of a foot per pendicularly, from this wall, horizon tally to the side of the boat, these measurements would be offsets. The effect of it is much like slii'ing the boat crosswise into sections, then dividing each section into parallelo grams a foot high, then calculating the area of each of these foot-high 'parts, and adding thc-in together to mane ine area or tne section, and tnis. it may readily be seen, is going to be a good deal of a job. Simpson's rule is rather a scareful thing when you look at It in the en gineer's field books, but it is not such a bit of mathematical depravity as it looks to be. and the application of it is a matter of plain arithmetic, al though involving quite a lot of ad dition, multiplication and division. Having divided the load-water lines into 10 ' equal parts, you have made nine cross-sections. You add the areas of these cross sections. Having determined the displace ment, the length factor and the sail area, the measurer will then ascertair the square foot of the sail area and multiply it by the length factor. Ho will then ascertain the cubic root of the displacement and with it divide the product he has obtained by the multiplication of the length factor by the sail area factor; and then to get the ultimate result he will take IS per cent of the result of that division, and that will be the rating for time allowance. GETS 3 TRIPLES GIAXT BATSMAX NICKS ELLER FOR RECORD STCXT. National League Pitchers Seldom Free With Long Hits, Ac cording to Statistics. NEW YORK. July 3. When Ross Young of the Giants leaped on Hod Eller of the Reds for a trio of triples he did something out of the ordinary, for the list of National league players who have turned this trick since the parent organization got back to com mon sense and an eight-club circuit is not a large one. Back In the days when the National was operating with. a dozen clubs Scrappy Bill Joyce of the Giants arose one afternoon and smote four three-baggers, but since lfOO three triples in one combat has been the limit for pastlmers. This was the second time in Young's career he had assembled three long blows in one fracas, the other occa sion being on October 3, 1917, when Ross got to Joe Oeschger, then of the Phillies, for a double and a brace of triples. The last man. prior to Young, to saw off three triples In a National league game also was a Texan J. Owen Wilson of the Pirates, native of Austin. Owen had a field day with the bat again3t Eros Barger of the Superbae on July 24, 1911, being cred ited with three three-baggers and one single when all the returns were In. Davy Brain, who aid a lot of wan dering around the National league circuit. Is the one man who twice tripled thrice in games in the senior organization, starring in this manner once when he was with the Cardinals and once when he was with the Pi rates. This is a list of the National leaguers who. in 21 games, have made three triples in one game: April 18. 1901 Sheckard. Brooklyn, against Dunn and Duggleby of Philadelphia-September 22, 1903 Donlin, Cincin nati, against Mitchell of Philadelphia. May 29. 1905 Brain. St. Louis, against Robertaille and Lynch of Pittsburg. August 8. 1J05 Brain, Pittsburg, against Wllhelm f Boston. August 10. 1905 Moran. Boston, against Case and Robertaille of Pitts burg. July 24. 1911 Wilson. Pittsbuig, against Bars r of Brooklyn. May 11, 1920 Young. New York, against Eller of Cincinnati. Johnson Thorn Rankles. The question ever recurring as to which fighter of his class was the "greatest of all time." never will be settled and is destined to boom down the ages unanswered. However, ac cording to tieorge ureen. a prominent boxer of a decade ago and now in structor in the manly art of self-defense at the Olympic Athletic club of San Francisco, there is no question as to what boxer did the greatest harm to boxing. Green accords this distinction to Jack Johnson, the ne gro, and former heavyweight cham pion of the world. fie says he is willing to accord It by acclamation. Accuracy Bait Casting: is a sport in which you will be most accurate and skillful only when you use a sturdy, well balanced and pliant rod, an accurate reel and a strong line. Try a "Bristol'" Steel Fishing Rod, a Meek or Blue Grass Reel and a Kingfisher Silk Lrn Fishing Line. There's a wide variety to meet'every fishing need. Inspect "Bristol" Fishing Tackle at anv representative Knortinc e-oorle ".J-WlCS. " ' o c?ssN:- 1rSi?!s store. If you cannot get exactlv what you want, send us your deal er's name and we will mail you 17 w Bristol, Meek and King- fisher catalogs FREE. Horton Manufacturing Co. Bristol, Conn. 99, ' ' . f 1 i