; SUNDAY, JULY 5, 1908. THE MORNING ASTOItJAN, ASTORIA, - OREGON. 9 Q Moo in 1" e Juuw Right at the Moutl of ttie Columbia River That OIL and natural GAS have been discovered in paying quantities across the Columbia River from Astoria at Onieda, Washington, f has been important enough to a number of well-known reliable parties:to cause the organization of the Pacific Coast Gas & Oil Co., with a capital stock of $300,000. This company has just placed a number of shareslof stock on the market at the low price of $50.00 per share. READ ON- ; What the Company U The Pacific Coast Cai & Oil Co. It composed of reliable builnen men of Oregon and Waihington whose only purpoie it to develop the property to the belt of hi ability and produce a paying mine of oil and gaa that all who have purchased atock may share in ita profits. The officera aerve with out salary and include among them some of the most reputable citizens of the State. To make the company strong on account of ita brilliant fu ture it hai aecured leasee on over 6000 acrei of land. It hai obtained the highest expert authority on the geological formation of the land,, employed the strongest expert work men to operate the drilling apparatus and given such other evidence of good faith to warrant any man making an investment with them, ( Alex Sweek, president, Portland. Clayton S. Barber, sec. and treas. R. A, Wade, vice-preaident Directors John Nelson, Oneida, Wash.; Geo. I Hutchins, Portland; We Anderson; Deep Kiver, Wash. The plant is now in constant opera tion. The drilling is being done under the supervision of two expert oil well operators. You can see them at work any day of the week at Oneida right opposite As toria. The picture opposite is a view of the derrick in actual operation. ; 4 i If you have any doubt as to the sta bility of the com pany, or in the manner in which it is operating, be fore you make any investment rvisit the property any day and satisfy yourself. Oil and gas will be found in paying quanti tiesAfter the i(strike"iit will be too late ftp '5 buy stock. Do it'NOW. StocK for Sals For jEcu'cfscti Ivi tts The per value of the stock is $100 per share, but js now offered at one half ($50) and it is worth it The company has already sold a limited amount of stock, equipped the prop erty with the best working machinery in the world and it has plans for a great future. The money secured from the sale of stock will be to push the work. Every dolar will be used to prepare for the best interest of the company. As the drill goes down the stock will surely rise. The price it ia now offered at will only be a short time. A good rule ia to let oppor tunity in when it knocks at the door. For an investment there is nothing more tangible, brighter or more surer dvidend paying than this stock, par ticularly at $30 per share. Don't wait until it goes to par, but buy now. It is really a chance that comes seldom. Further particulars at the addresses given below. t. F y AS ET3 ft nn Ml I 402 Commercial Block, Portland, Oregon. Higgins& Warren, Savings Bank Building, Astoria, Oregon. BROWN S-BIG SCHEME Chicago Pitcher Says Ball Play ers Should Be Numbered. INNOVATION MAY BE TRIED. Three Fingered One Boosting Plan to Have Figures Designate Identity of Each Player on Ttam Would Be of Croat Htlp to Spectators. "It will not be lone probably next year, when all ball player will wear numbers Just like athletes in a trnck meet or Jockeys on a race track," sold Mordecal Brown, the Chicago Nation als' star twlrler. recently. The three lingered one was nfkod what he thought of such fl scheme and aaia no haa always encouraged It and would like to see a rule passed by the National baseball commission making It compulsory for every player to wear bis number on his back, so that every man and woman In the grand stand could readily Identify the player at but or In the field or whorever ho might be. "I know It must be troublesome for the people In the grand 'stand to fol low the players, especially visiting teams," continued Brown, fit would be ao easy for a player to 'have his number made right In his suit, and the programme would carry the Jiey. "For Instance, the programme could nrlnt the list of nlnvers on the team, beginning with Chance. 1; Kllng, 2; Overall, 8, nud so on down the list of names until every player had been numbered. When he came to bat bis number on his back would furnish the key to the Identification. "What a swel nilxup there would be at a track meet If the competitors were not nuinlrored! How many per sons In a grand stand would know the winner of a horse race If they were not guided b.v numbers? Then why should It not be just as important for baseball players to be Identified? . "An umpire gets up before a large crowd and says, 'Ladles and gentle men, the batteries for today are Hump ty Doodlehump and Bowwowman for Boston and Huropty poodlehump and , Bins for Chicago.' How many per sons In the grand stand are able to catch the name? "They tell mo Umpire Silk O'Lougb Hn Just spits out the name of the visit lug battery without gluing tjjo crowd o v -J A i J: Ay 1 'tf I '. r:d their u'Jiiibcrs 'everybody would know the men In uniforms, aud, be sides, the club would sen more pro grammes. If one club ever starts the Idea, all other teams will follow." BRESNAHAN'S BUSY BRAIN. Famous Baseball Catcher Has His ln vontive Ceniua Ajun at Work. Catcher IJoger Bresnu!iau of the New York Nntlnnnls lias luveuted un acci dent proof cntc'.il'.-.s g've Rotfer Is one of the greatest Inventors or safety luiHfthnll ilevlces In tlie world, lie tries them on himself, but he Isu't- stingy. If anv one else wauls tu use his Ideas. they can-if they see him first, Bresnnhnn received hla brst Impulse along the rocky road of Invention when he discovered that kls shins were be crlnnlns fo look like a pair of twin Swiss cheeses punched full of holes by being hit with th? toil. To get riu or Dili HOWAHD, CTILITY OF THU OHICAOO NATIONALS. Another man has been added to the Chi cago National' already large hospital Hit. The latest one ti Utility Man tl Howard. Me fractured ft small bone In his right hand while sliding to baee In a recent game. At Ihu llrvio of Injury Howard was leading the National league In batting with a percentage of .352.) any ?ai'nlug; aflu"not dtTo In U thousand catches the names. By the time he an nounces the battery for the home team the crowd is quiet and there is. a chance to catch the names, but most of the people know the home players, but cannot find out who the visiting battery Is. ' ' ?e players on the bench are con tinually nnswerlug calls from .the giaud stand by some of our friends as to who Is pitching and who la playtuj center, md such .lilt?, wtcu If the nltwers ear- V ? 4 1 : ty BOOlttt BKESNAHAK, FAMOUS OATCHKR OF , THE KKW TOBK NATIONALS. the Swiss cheese Bresuahan tried va rious schemes, ev'eu going so far as to put glue on his shins and then apply a thick coating of feathers to form pads that would break the force of the down shoots when they lauded.. At last he so.'ed the ditflcuity by adopting the English cricket shin guards, the Idea being that the oaii would be foo:eJ on seeing them and would naturally slow up. This has worked well un to date, but the young er gcneratlo'j of baseball players are growing wise. Boger Is keeping np to the times tu scientific research. He to now applying for a patent on a scheme thnt will make the catcher's Job a sine cure an automatic catching device that takes the sizzling ball hot from the pitcher, kills Its speed and delivers It Into the catcher's hands as tame as a duck. LOOK OUT FOR THE REDS. Cincinnati Team Putting Up Cham pionship Article of Ball. The baseball populace of Cincinnati Is Mn a fever of suspense. Are the Beds a teiim of second dlvisioners rushing aloug at a pennant winning pace or are they real ball players who have started their normal pace with a chance of keeping it up until the last game is decided? These are the ques tion the fans are asking. The bugs are enthusiastic, but are not permu ting enthusiasm to rob them of their reason. They remember how year aft er year the Beds have galloped off with the leaders iu the early part of the season, to drop like a deflated bal loon when the pace began to tell. Peculiarly euough. the man whom no one thought good enough to manage the team is the one who is keeping the team up In the race. Ganzel has done fqr the Beds, what no other manager ever did. He has converted them Into a gingery aggre eatlon. He set an example by playing I a marvelous game in the field and hit tlng like a demon. RECTOR, THE SPEED MARVEL University cf Virginia Runner Promis ing Men on Olympis Team. No figure lu the areua of amateur athletics today "commands r.jere atten tion than that of James A. Better of the .University of Virginia. ..'Hector's sensational running tu the NX) yard dashes this year stamps him as a pos sible world's champion. The' former 1nvreueevtlle boy has run "the hr.u rtrpil" consistently In I) 4-5 secon.ls. Once he did 0 3-5 on a dead still L:y, n::l once rltb half a gale beblnd h!m I Roetor, cace homo" iu 9 2-5. In nil these races the Virginia athlete was clocked by competent though not ex pert timers. .a tfle recent Olympic tryoute at Philadelphia Rector made good. He " -'1v: I , Colin" e Great Horae. Colin Dromlses to be "the horse of the country" bo far as the American tort is concerned. He Is In a lair way to eclipse all records. Up to date be haa won fourteen consecutive races and earned $153,000. Colin has won both the Withers and Belmont stakes this year. The Withers, which ia one of the , American turf classics, was run from i 1S74 to 1S80. inclusive, at Jeromt nark. After that the race was run at Morris park, first "over the hilT and later over what was known as the "Withers mile." It was decided for the flrrft time at Belmont parte, in 1905, when Mr. Belmont s Blandy was tne winner In 1DOU W. EL Brown's Ac countant was successful, while last year J. L. HcGlnnls' Frai Gill wae triumphant I vrs a. RErrron, srKEDT spkintkr op the csrvEBsnY op vibqinia. failed to win the 100 meter dash, but he eaualed the world's record of 10 4-5 seconds in winnlug the first heat and was second to Lawson Kobertson in the final, after being set back a yard for a false start He beat Nat Cart- well of Pennsylvania even with that handicap, and that proved his claim to greatness. " , Rector is "set up" much on the style Kf Arthur Duffey. the real 9 3-5 spriut w. He stands a bit 'under five feet Seven iuches and tips the beam at 143 pounds. He resembles Duffey in ac: tlon, too. with that same ,qulets snappy lee action used b.v the Georgetown flier. Rector gets away Hue a flash or lightning and finishes J 1st ns fast Boy's Life Saved- Mv little boy, four years old, had a severe attack of dysentery. We had two physicians; both of them gave him up. We then gave him Chamber lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy which cured him and believe that saved his life. William H. Strol ling', Carbou Hill, Ala. There is no doubt but this remedy saves the lives of many children each year. Give it with castor oil according to the plain printed directions and a cure is. cer tain. For sale by Frank Harj and leading druggrists. McHale Goe to Toronto. The Boston club has lent Outfielder Jimmy McHale to the Toronto club. Tfifi Otnr v DiiislaclB is erecting a plant at PORTLAND, OREGON : for the manufacture of their world famous PORTABLE WELL. DRILLING MACHINES ,' for water, oil, gas, etc., etc A moderate amount of money will start you ia a profitable business STAR PORTABLE DRILLING MACHINES have been proved by Competitive Tests to be, The Best In The World. For full particulars regard-, ing well drilling machines,, tools, supplies, etc, write to , THE STAR DRILLING MACHINE CO. PORTLAND, QREQON. . or AKRON, OHIO,