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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1915)
as. 4k Af WAMWV W ' faaF W avv -Ta-wv s J w - - W - ' J " - "3 KEY UNEUP OF FIGHTERS ARE OFTEN ,tha manager. ' dA "featherweight .wit I guaranteed $600 for a fight. That sum j was paid over by the promoter, to the 1 manager, but tha battler the man COFFEY WAGING MERRILY ON HOCKEY WAR NOW HOC WAS VICTIM !l QUARfET OFSTARS OF HARVARD AND YALE FOOTBALL ELEVENS PORTLAND PLUCKED TO FINISH BY THEIR MANAGERS X 1 Boob Battlers Easy Prey to Financial Methods In Many Cases Today. MANY ' INSTANCES CITED woo worked and auirerea got $4). OF HASTY DECISION, SAYS HIS MANAGER once-time champion told us recently that various managers have drained him for over $30,000 before he decided he'd do his own managing. . It's a - great little -geb-rlch-quick- ROSEBUDS . ! , .... AND SALARIES SOAR GIVEN BY MANAGER First Real Practice of Local Men Wili'Be Held in This City Next. Thursday. v" 1 . SAVAGE NOW ENCOURAGED Without unnecessary exertion game. isn't it T , . WASHINGTON DEAF Pacific Coast Teams Making Big Inroads on" East, 6et 1 ting Away Star Players. CANADIANS ARE BUSY NOW Manager Admits Protege Was Groggy When Declared Out in Fight With Moran, MIGHT HAVE WON OUT Wires tae Carried Off ars to Mayers . , . la vu rutfl df the united . ; ' ftates. By' A. P. Carrey. Vancouver' B C Not SO While rOIT,ana eDU( bockey septet, haa a Vancouver, n. u., oy. zo. wnueiDrett . ,a t . . . the present hockey war between the Pacific Coast and National Hocasy as-' A.I. ll IL . a 1 . torn, has caused salaries to soar to the same .height as they did during the - first break between the leagues a. few seasons ago when midnight raids and . av general rusn of players in various directions necessitate the magnates ; paying record prices' In order to securo the best talent In the game. Seme of Canada's best known puck chasers will . be paid fancy prices for their services on the ice during the coming season. Since the declaration of war was Is sued from the Pacifo coast, the Pat licks, crabbed a whole N. II. A. sauad. I ' Wrecking one of. the eastern clubs to . ucb an extent that the eastern govern- lng body will be compelled to cut down XO rive Cluoe. wires nave carried oi- , fers to players in all parts of the country. In the recent raid the Pa clfle coast collared five eastern play ers and lost one In the shuffle. ' right Btlll Continue. And the fight for the services of ether men still continues. With George Kennedy, the eastern magnate, shout Zing offers in salaries aggregating $10, ' 000 to Pacific coast players, Who, by " the way, have turned a deaf ar to all eastern proposals, and the Patrick .. hrrva mmlrttmtnmr (lia stars thv have ' secures in the east, trie most exciting ; of alt wars In sporting circles In the . dominion continues. The end has been the Pacific Coast players to entertain aay offers front; the effete east and the announcement by the Patricks that. i having rounded out their clubs, they Will make no further overtures to east ern players. ( Sammy Llchtenheln, the owner of the Montreal Baseball club in the In 4 ternatlonal league, who spends the ' winter months -and considerable per fectly good money , in operating the Wanderer hockey team. In the N. H. A., It. out with the statement ' that the present war was unwarranted and that only the players will make money this " season. This Is taken to mean that in order to hold their players the eastern . clubs have boosted salaries materially. On the coast salaries will be ln- ' creased and the players will draw down pretty fair wages for the winter's mrnrlr Day of Big atalariM Fast.. v.-" But the day for 45000 beaatie la Canadian hockey and lacrosse Is past. No longer will "Newsy", Lalonde, who averaged around 110,000 for year's work in lacrosse and hockey, be asked ! rca-n- second, to sign at his own price. He rhay re- yards Russell Kaufman. Lin celTs a good wage but the magnates, - $ln ' : t TR9, :46: Walter Cofold. despite the war and the paucity of players of senior caliber, will no longer be so liberal with their money. "It's not so long ago that the hockey' play- rs, as a whole, averaged $150 per man natr a-am. an whan von nnra that.' h. ,, . 1 Z k- ' tney never engage in over is matcnei during a season, this 4s pretty good pay for them. With Lalonde the price was usually 15000 for the season In , lacrosse, a .season of ftve months, and In hockey the got between 13000 and . 15000 for three ane! a half months' work. Two seasons ago "Cyclone" Taylor, the Ty Cobb of hockey, received f 2200 for a season, being the highest firlced player in hockey at that time. Is will not receive tbat price this season but at the same time his salary Will be about the highest paid In jPaclflo coast hockey. 'J Limit Xa Ma&ched. . That the limit has been reached In ommerci all xlng sport in Canada is the ' Atlj.a . - A V. 1 .J 1 -i . ' nttn nartlciilarlv thn.A whn hnv " financed organisations In the past. To five some idea of the condition we Ond sport today as compared with sore eaaona ao we can, iu.no tne au OX tne sw. wssyninster lacrosse "' team, the best aggregation of. stick : wialdera la the business. In 1112, play- fa a- on a. coorjerative baala and with men In on the split, the world's tampions received $1250 per man for '."toa- season. That season they played , tar : laU matches. The next year the MU players received 11100. but ra il turns of the season Just closed, or at 'least- callad- dff whaft tha attendance ..j, fell "away, show that the players on the cup team received but 47S per man This will give some Idea of the con ' it ion la professional sport in Canada, tfhen tt was. good tha players derived the benefit and the club owners did t he-work." Now that affairs have token different turn and times of depres . lon are onns owing to the European war, tha club owners refuse to take any more chances of dropping their money and tha players will be paid Just what they ara capable of drawing vat tha rata. , -This doesn't mean, .however, that the players will be forced to work on a .email salary. Tha - hockey war has . necessitated the general boosting of i prices but we haven't heard of any record prices being offered ' . , . ' V. . .... jfTana xviguoor, star ox me macule r...t ,i. in 111 1-1 K 1. nhnrtuit A have signed an Ottawa contract on Jits own terms, Nighbor Was anxious t Remain in .tha east and his own terms would probably be about half "what he waav receiving for a season's vbrk on tha Pacific, coast. Coast Boores XaavUy.. VWlth the arrival on the coast of five piembers of tha former Toronto club tha Pacific Coast has scored heavily ia tha war. They secured enough players to. round out one" club, and It Will KeWpr Yen Young and . v Haalthjr - : -.' . i - ' - ' ' Basament of Medical BuHJing v .'j Park- and AJder StrU-: ? - r -r . . ' v , -! v : . Hanry Lehman, R, EL Franklin, . - i - i Proprietor. -Manager. Trv Rriwlinor Owning Battle of Bmmb Will Be Hayed Against VanoouYer, B. C, Team December 7. In his mind, Manager Savage, of the Portland Rosebud hockey septet, baa a will line up In the opening battle of the season, to be played) against the XnnnAii. J .- n " December 7. ' The probable llne-up Is: Goal Murray. Left defense Johnson. Right defense Laghlin. Rover Oa-ttn an. Left wing Harris. Center Dunderdale. Right wing Marples. . Spares Tobln, Barbour and possibly Irvine. The first real practice of the local septet is scheduled for next Thursday, following the arrival of Dundordaia. Murray, Laughlin, Marples and Irvine, Portland will have but 11 days In which to prepare its players for the uium u. ins season, uia aian&ger Savage Is planning to put his players through jmany hard practice session. Savage has received many encourag ing reports about the new players he has secured and it appears as though Portland will have a crackerjack team this season. Much time will be spent on combination play this season. Two youngsters, Charley Ukslla and Ooheen,-' who played amateur hockey around St. Paul for several seasons, are working out with the Rosebuds, and they are showing up in great style. Ooheen is a husky youngster and has lots of speed. Portland's first home match will be against the Vancouver team December 10. Manager Lester Patrick has his sep tet pretty well lined np and according reports from Seattle. Pete Muldoon has his squad practically ready for the opening of the season. Manager Prank Patrick, of the Vancouver team, is scouring 'the east for more players. Close Finishes in Races at Ice Rink ' The weekly Saturday morning races at the Portland Ice Hippodrome for pupils of the grammar and high schools were very exciting- and brought out some good sprints. Some 400 chil dren and spectators viewed the races. r Results: 210 yards George Storey, Davis, first, time :40; Robert Parrell, Couch, recond. 220 yards Paul McCusker, Cmch, first; time :28; Sharlea Cook, fChap- ; Irvlngton, second 220 yards Margaret MeCormiek, St. Marys, first; time :34; Stella Rlggs. Lincoln, second. Couple's race. 220 yards Stella T 1 T t 1 Ml a. i.1 . n a un"B. "t; lime :u; itussei Kaufman, Lincoln, second, i Cr ' Sons of 6panlsh War Veteran's race Douglas Farrell, Washington high. lirst. time :38; Francis Apiterson. Franklin high, second. Wisconsin Wins in Cross Country Meet Madlnon, Wis., Nov. 20. (I. N. S.) Wisconsin won the-western cross-country meet here in one o? the hottest contests ever staged. Captain Watson of Minnesota took' first place with a rew conference record of 25:45:2. Ma son of Illinois came in second with 26:14. Schardt, Felton and Benisch of Wisconsin finished third, fourth and fifth, respectively. Ames of the Mis souri valley conference finished sec ond with 62 points; Ohio state third. 108; Minnesota, fourth, 112; Illinois fifth, 110; Purdue,' 123; Kansas, 140; Iowa and Chicago. All-Nationals Win Shutout. Ban Francisco, CaL, Nov. 20. (I. N 8.) The American All-Stars could do nothing with Vaughn's delivery today, the National All-Stars winning; the first game of the series here. 2 to o Vaughn allowed but four hits, while arPer was toucnea up for nine. A single, and a double by Kliiifer of the Cincinnati Keds forced In both runs. Score r H E Nationals 2 9 1 Americans o 4 2 Batteries Vaughn and McCarthy; Harper and Cady, Coasters in Western League. Los Angeles, CJ.. Nov. 20. (P. N. S ) Bill Malarkey and Joe Tobln, both former Coasters, have been signed up fofc the Wichita Western league club by Ham Patterson, who watches out for the Kansas team's interests here. Chemawa Beats O. A. C. Chemawa, Or., Nov. 20. The Chem awa Indian school football team de- I r11 l" Oregon Agricultural col- t a. - J 1 . . . V i iegreshmen el.even yesterday. IS t 0. Shemawa days Alhnnv Thanksgiving. " when you figure that the men they secured all played on the team which won the eastern championship two yeara 'ago and defeated Victoria in the world's series, it would appear that the Patrlcka got Just who they went after and as a result of their enterprise and desire to provide good hockey for the coast the cream of eastern talent will perform on the steel blades out this way during the next four months. ' Lichtenheln says; in a communica tion to the writer, that the only solu tion to the existing trouble between1 tha cast and west Is to organise a commission and adopt uniform rules. This was what the Patricks .suggested two seasons ago. To this the N. H. A. agreed and after drawing up an agreel ment they were the firBt to ignore it and this led, to the present war. When the NJiH. A.. can show that they are Sincere in their desires to foster and promote : the g?ne ajong proper lines they nay find the cSast magnates In a rtcepttve mood. Until then the commis sion caa be. considered as standing ad' J Journed,lne die. - , . i v t' yjhrtr-.-t -NTS -H - f-rm s-v5 yj? - HM?VteJ. ?&zvmsi msemmm Of this collection the only one who did not play in yesterday's game between Harvard ami Yale was y Kn wright, the promising back field man who was declared ineligible to play on account of a class condition. Scovil formerly played with Dartmouth and is taking the place of Harry LeGore, who wag barred from Yale football for playing summer baseball for hia board. ' Carpentier Courageous Airman at . at Fanlous Figkter Tells of Dangers Hundred Shots (Fired at Figkter By George R. Holmes. New York, Nov. 20. Georges Car pentier, the sensational young French boxer Who before the war was looked on as the most logical man to un crown Jack Johnson, loBt his first "bout" in the world war. Carpentier is now a sergeant aviator in the French flying corps, and has seen ex tensive service In the air. In letters to friends here, Carpentier describes his adventures and mourn fully depicts the loss of his first brush .with the enemy, but he says there will be another battle, and when it comes it will be to a death decision no throwing in the towel, nor fak ing. Carpentier relates that he got his pilot's Uoanse after only two months' apprenticeship. -He was given a new Maurice Freeman 130-horsepower bi plane and was employed in reconnoit ering over Alsace. ' OouUat Oaten tlx Tanbe. One day he was assigned to patrol j ,itv and wbii. ha ar,fl hl af high iri the clouds a German aviator, or "aviatik," came into view.' , T 'immediately gave chase." he writes, "but the Boche'a machine was much, fleeter than mine and rue the day! he outdistanced me. I can only describe the feeling by saying it was Ilka going into the ring against a man many . stoaea heavier, than yourself. I . have fought and whipped niany ad versaries., under similar handicaps, but,ilaslI could do nothipg." ' liuring the chase Carpentier" a ma chine was hit twice by tha German, who fired over a hundred .shots at. him, "but he himself was : untouched. Georges has had many parrow es capes during ha war, but with one ex ception has come through unscaftd. One. one occasion, he .relasT his motor 'stopped dead while iie1 was 1800 meters 6000 feet) above the earth. .'. " Tfeve 8a.' ITeax Out. '-" In all my ring battles,?, he, .whites, I never was so near: out, nieatally ana ptrysicauy, as inenrrnere iriunjr suspended high in the clouds. There was an empty feellng-Mn'.the plt. of my stomach. And theref was nope of my seconds to -toss upr the kponge so I could sink away into sweat, oouvion. Bombardier Wells, yoil remember, al most Had me out ' opo, Tut. It: was nothlBg .-compared , with this." ' i "But 1 -brushed, the cobwebs away, tion of tha leters,Uf 1 do say it my self. I managed :' glide-down. The Vosges country,! .though,'. Is -very rough and hilly, sjsd I tit -with crash! "The shock of . meeting the ground threw ma headlong, t I 'was stunned spread ray feet iwide apart and hang on for" the feelV By .skillful manipula tor a - momentV but came round nicely long before 'tha referee started count ing, and when IT took atock of myself In my corner found I had a bad gash in t ftfead and a sprained . ankle. Quite wohderful. Isn't it. that I should escape aoioaallT. 'W.hen poor,, brave fagoud-' tfajnous Franca aviator)! was iailed?-'-:'' .-'. : , V r. Wants to i Jgset ; Aaotaar "i waa found by soma of my coua- I trymen and t taken j;o tha-nospltai .1 was only there a few weeks, and am now out and looking or another chance to sign up with one of the Boches, or a dozen, for that matte'r. "It is quite ppsible that by the time you receive this I shall have achieved my ambition, and really brought down a Boche, aviatik." Carpentier is, of the opinion the war Is a lot nearer to an end t:in most people Imagine. He compared the Germans to a boxer who piles up a That Kick of Payne's Beai: Rest 63-Yard Goal Recalls Others Mark Payne fractured all existing "cord, by kicking a goal from field tha 63 yard line, but you haven t heard much about it simply because Mark doesn't go to Yale, or Princeton, or Harvard. Payne's accomplishment is the most wonderful in football history; yet, his marvelous feat has been almost over looked, because some persons regard him as a "minor leaguer," simply be cause he footballs for Dakota Wes- ley an, instead of for one of the al leged "higher institutions of learning" in the east. What difference does it make what team a man plays with if he performs such an amazing stunt? Isn't It just as hard for a man on a small college eleven to boot a ball S3 yards ,as it Is for a player on a big eleven? Ho thing- riakey About Kick. It was in the Dakota Wesleyan Northera Normal game in " Aberdeen. S. on October 16. that Payne, drop ping back to rae 63 yard un some tt was the 6 yard line caught a preftt pass of his center, poised him- self,; dropped the ball. even as enemy linesmen were hurling themselves at jhlm, met it on the rebound with a . swing of his mighty right boot and sent the 'ball soaring over, the cross bar of the enemy's goal. Payne's daring trick surprised every person who saw that game. When he dropped back of the line, it was fig ured that be might try a forward pass or a punt A drop kick? No, he never would try-that. The atstance was too far, the wind was against ' him, but Payne tried and' he' succeeded, and by lis success he has carved for himself untXOOtDaii s nau oi me a nouceaoie niche. X - Fayna'a Kick Baa CSsa's. Payne' a kick beat by one yard that memorable boot executed by PatCDea, the great Wisconsin- player, the man who ranked as one of the-moat won derful kickers in tha entire history of the game.. It was made on' November 25, 1898, In tha game against North western. Soma who saw .that boot claimed that it "was only' a 60 yard 1 hoist, bat the of ficlala uled that the j O'Dea got credtt for a 12 yard oati aroppea on iu ysxa use, ana drop bier lead of nolota in tha first 10 rounds only to be knocked out by one stiff punch in the eleventh. It is not j Impossible that the young Frenchman i had in mind the present allied of fen-i sive when he prophesied that the al- lies still packed a kick in one paw. The part aviation is playing in the war is tremendous, he says. I "My American friends cannot im- agine, tfle granaeur, tne magnificence of seeing a field of. 50 soaring birds sail out Into the sunlight bound for some hated camp of the Boches. No one can. I need to think a ring bat- tie was the most grandly spectacular lathing imaginable. But, pooh! It is nothing beside feeling yourself soar- lng in the clouds after a real enemy not one you have knocked down and you can help to his feet and shake hands. . "There Is no handshaking in this ring! "To my many American friends, aufturned over to my manager by the viir, and wish with me that I may j promoter. Out of that I should have inch my match with my adversary received $900, but when it came to re cllntf and get the decision." kick, which remained as the record for 17 years until quiet, unassuming Mark Payne, tha "minor leaguer," made it 3. On November 30, 1882, J. T. Haxall of Princeton kicked a 65 yard goal from placement in the game against Yale, but placement kicking and drop kicking are entirely different matters. J. Pi Davis of Dickinson got second place in the list of goal-f rom-place-ment kickers by shooting the ball over the bar from the 8 yard line on No vember 26, 1905, from the 68 yard line. Other Famous Sicks. Payne's trick4 puts him first in the list of drop kickers, placing O'Dea sec ond and leaving third place tied by J. V. Cowling and J. E. Duffy. Cow ling, playing for Harvard in a game against Princeton, November 17, 1883, made a drop kick from the 55 yard line, and J. E. Duffy of Michigan tied , that mark when he kicked a field goal from the 65 yard line in the gamu ! against Cornell, November 21, 1891. Tha est drop kicks during the past few years, withv Payna's excluded, were executed by Harold Pumpelly of Yale, 49 yards against Princton, No vember 16, 1912, and HObey Baker of Prlneeton, 43 yards against Yale, No vember 15. 1913. Carl Woodward of Tulane university tops the list of modern goal-from-placement kickers. On November 1. 1913, in the game against St. Louis ui.lverslty, he kicked a goal from placement from tha 48 yard line; against Harvard on Nov. 1. 1911. R. J. Brown of Rochester kicked from the 47 yard line against St. Lawrence; Oc tober 7. 1911, Charley Brickley of Harvard mad a placement kick for Harvard against Princeton; November 2, 1912. Hobey Baker kicked from placement for Prlneeton from tha 46 yard Una against' Holy Cross. Writer to Decide Best, j Southern sporting , writers will da-'; cide tha winner of -the trophy offered by the Birmingham Press cup to the ; champion gridiron eleven of tha South ern intercollegiate Athletic association.! Welker Cochran, tha Iowa b js line WlUard expert; is l years old.' - Pair Manager Xs atlsfled With t5 Par , Cent Commission on Earnlnfi of Els Protege. New York, Nov. 23. The next crop of American millionaires will be bar- vested from the army of prixe fight managers the persons who have li-! vvvtiw iiuw i get hsu quic wun toe least exertion, - The unlearned in pugilistic methods are possessed of the idea that the fighter gets the bulk of all the hugo purses that are hung up for battles in these frenzied finance days. The un- learned has the wrong idea. It's the so-called "managers" who grab off the ' hugest share of the gold tinted ma-! luma. A good manager very often helDs a . ft .kt.. .v. . .1-- II ilstic -heap but there are few good 1 managers In this era. The fair and j honest manager is satisfied with a la per cent share of the fighter's income as payment for his efforts In boosting his man and guiding him along the financial pathway, but the trouble with the pugilistic game, is that many un-' flnrnnlllnn . nre.-tn h'Hm .. ' A . K . selves onto fighters and act like leeches-they suck out of the fighter ; nearly eyery dollar he earns, and in the end, the fighter has nothing and the manager everything. Many Managers lake Xrsaches, " i tier icttimjr goatship insisting i" nailing tmrtic, made the rounds of the fight managers' an(J incidentally dispersing spectators offices in Gotham , and marvelled be-1 ana paraders, every two blocks, cause many of them occupied regal jn the preliminary the W. S. D. suites in some of thv biggest office "Brownies" won the 98-pound city buildings in the town. That don't championship from the Arnada gram seem strange to us. The only marvel- ! mar school, 7-0. ous thing about his discovery, in our j The line-up: oplnW is that he didn't find a bunch , Washington ' Position. Oregon. of managers occupying and owning ! Kelly P. K. Fowler, Shannon the whole building. i Durant K, T Crow The softest way of gathering in big Fransen y. .R. G Walker money these days Is to manage some 5a,n,?r" 'iCvi Harm to fight and knows little or nothing aj- Seward. - about the financial end of the game, i Ha gen . L. E Fromm That class of fighters and they are Seplt QuarUr Tussing in the majority are easy prey for the ; Kuhn R.H. ... Thftper. Capt. human , vultures who term themselves , Kotula . . . L. H. Tell "minanm" fDeer. (Capt.) ull Peters r I " . Rferer, Parvis. .'hlcago; umplrp, Whenever a youngster rises in the! Leut. Benedict. West Point; linesmvn. pugilistic world there's a mad scramble Clarke, St. James. Time of quarters among the "managers" to grab him off 15 minutes. and put his financial affairs under Touchdowns Deer 4, Kotula 3. their control. They scent prey and Kuhn 1. Sanders 1, Fromm l. Goals they are like wolvJ in pursuit of It. from touchdowni-Deer 1, Kuhn 2. The "managers" usuaUy sign up tha . . , boob battler to a contract that is After Cros Country Kvents. . A Vn.1. . i ! I lopsided; one that is Iron clad- as' Newark, which will hold the 1916 far as the fighter is concerned but can National Amateur Athletic Union track be broken any time the manager de- tLJ1 field championships, is also de sires. The "manager" has nothing to slrous of staging the organization s lose and everything to gain. If the fighter develops into a real drawing card the "manager" can hang onto him until his usefulness is over. If tha ; fighter should prove to be a flivver the manager can cut loose, Earns (9000, Oats 98000. One battler who recently cut loose from his "manager" told us that in a trifle over one year he had earned $9000 in the ring, but that all he got out of it was $1000. "I should have received nearly 17030," he said, "but my manager got the big bulk of the money. He was to get 26 per cent of my income for managing me. Well ne got nearly 80 per cent. ( And what happened to me is happening j to other fighters right along. They are being trimmed by their managers. I a fighter doesn't know much about the fighting game. He leaves that up ! to his manager. If the manager Is a I square one the fighter gets a square ideal. But if he isn't, the fighter is j trimmed. "i once fought for a $1200 guar- rintee. That amount of money was settling up my manager gave me $65. He said that was all that was left. I made a howl but he explalnediat he : had to pay out $100 for press agVntlng ' me. 850 for something else, another $75 here, and so on. ! Other Znatancas Cited. j "I Investigated all these expend!-1 tures he said he had made and I found that he actually paid out only about $35. He gave me $65, and he pocketed i $1100. That was the way with most I of my fights." , j That case is only one of many. One fighter who earned over $130,000 in I fiva years Is said toriave received I only about $30,000. His manager got ; the bulk of the balance. j One of the most prominent heavy-1 weights in the country today said he earned over 814,000 for three fights and he never got a dollar. It went to I Dupont for Ducko rlE duck season's here. The bays are black with these toothsome game1 birds. There's plenty for all. Get your .gun ready i If your aim is true and your load's dependable youll get your share. mm) SHORELESS SH0T6UI POWDERS Dupent BalUatite m the nowdaes that win. Bulk or each Las its good points and each has its flies da. , Da Post Powders 4he ajboioe of 90 el American shooter, si loaded ia aQ standard shells or sold ia bulk at year deel-fa C !.sly Peat tfa Nassau 4 CamiMsV -i j . WUsBlifta.ua, Delaware) , WALLOPS OREGON, : CLINCHING TITLE Fierce, Clean Play Marks Game at Vancouver; Score 57 to 6. Vancouver, Wash.. Nov. 29. In a a-ame marked by fierce, clean playing, the Washington 8tate School for the (Deaf today clinched the coast title for schools of its class by defeating the heavier 67 to 0 Oregon Stale schooj. By a tJertes of bewilderlnc trick formations the locals kept scoring with painful regularity. Time and again thi 183 pound Washington fvill- fc bi bulk through a!ner," f?U,ur t0 yMrd" h0 "ft!f.m'n w U'! out I IQUipUIlK I.U llUy HIS I1UIJ1B.I1 " tHU' tempting ault. Besides scoring four touchdowns melf. r 1sd Motla m ."'".". ' ,'e all obstructions. Kotula's runt for touchdowns of 53 and 62 yard were secured either by aid of the deaf behe moth, or by a triple concealed pass For Oregon Fromm, Tusslng antf Shannon starred. For Washington nder il1111 LCer tt"t ""f did Before the game the Washington students in Mardl Oras costumes mt the visitors at the ferry, parading a huge goat dressed in Oregon colors. The parade was not a success, his ..... ..... - cross-country races next year. a ne contests would be staged in Weequshic Park, where the athletlc'jevents win be run oir. Sloman at Corvallis Meet. Frank Bloman will be amosg the Olympic club of San Francisco athletes who will compete in the Pacific coast indoor championship meet at Corvallis Or., February 7 and 8. Sloman may set a new quarter mile record. British Soldiers Hare. The Southern Counties Cross Coun try assocation, in whose territory are many of the training camps In Eng land, had arranged up to the first of November more than 60 races' for the troops, in which over 10,000 soldiers participated. Honolulu to Have Kaces. Honolulu may soon witness liorp racing under the auspices of the Ha waiian Polo and RarltK sshocIh t Ion. A 15 yt-a'r lease lias been m-i-u rod "rl Kaplolanl park, which will l..- nttrd UP for Po1 anJ horse racing. j z : Don't Let Your Truss Make Operation Necessary Operation for rupture would hardly ever be hsard of if it weren't for the mischief done by elastic and spring tiusses. Mighty few people er hat to U operated reeommesfl It Instead of advising operation. o- when firtt rsptartd. ,,ow 11 h" completely wired thouuodi ot But wearing makethirt truie yer nftr .nle wIk cane ineit almoat bople. rear ia aoonrr or later alnxjat ur to mttr Unw M due away with tba curae of belt, work for tha snrgeoii. ,rB straps snd springs. How if la persptr- Yoo know that from yoor own estxrtenre - tu-ioirf and water proof and will hold In tou know yotiTa won now than a er S" bth- UoW yoo eaa try 1t ality doyn probably getting worse all tba time. without baylas to risk penny and tow llttla if yon keep oa that wsy. bw lm c will It U rfwts if yo keep It. he before yoo n hsa to undergo a dangerous ami expaoijr operatto; Thu Ffaa Book Is Full of Facts Aren t 700 wining to fct a prov.- i.y Naver Before Put in Print tlty-Oay oeaicnsiraiBio nvw yuu yourself from all tbit? Especially wbes yon can naka thJa Uly- Say test wltboat bavlng to risk a peuiry V 60 Davs' Trial T Prova . . t How Good It Is Bars is something guaraataad mptora fcolder-whleb h ""' from Tr bsricg to l OI"' It has so thorooghl prored lt merits that w are willing to send it on 00 dayr trial. Well make it espeHtlly for ytwr rasa naka It ta nw measara sad practical land "TJP H to you Bust for a teat. It tt doas'nt hasp your mptura from com- lag -ava or fraca hot bar tog yoa ia sny way. Utn yoa ess send it back sad it wb t oust you a slog le penny. Don't Sand Any Money Simply writs for cur free book that will tell yoa everything yoa wast to know. It shows bow our gaaraataad rapt ore holder Is saada oa as absolutely saw principle. Ilnar It - Instantly and automatically pro tacts yoa agaiast efy stasia so your rupture ran't pos sibly be forced out. And bow In addition It arerldaa the ealy way ever disosvared for nvareamlsf the wenknass which Is tb Mai oases ! rapture. The sook tells bow our gnmnteed rapture h.ldef tb famous -Clntaa la o benetidal n.at phyaicUss la all parts of A tu eric a now X.oser'3 Mind Would Have Cleared and Victory Might Have Gome to Kim, It Is Claimed. New York. Nov. 2n. a squint down the long, winding Iqiu" of puRuts'n convinces one thnt. nftor hII, thcro mav V a lot of Justification for thi wnil that Billy Gibson let loone when his rrotege, Jim Coffey, was declared out while still on his feot In th third round of that recent hoot wtili Frunk Moran, the red-headed henvvwolght. When Referee Brown stopped thst fight. I'll admit that Coffey was croggy." snld Gibson, "but the stokpI iipps was temporary only. . In another minute or two his brain would hsve cleared and he eurely would have re cuperated, given Moran a battle all along and won out In the end. I think Brown's ruling was a hasty one and I'll always think that wav. His ruing puts blnck mark on Cof fey's record and for the tlm being has ' MUrd Coffey's chances of meeting WIllHrd. "Thone who have followed the ring game for many years know that there are hundreds of incidents -where a fighter, groftgy and senniinsly on the point of dropping to the mat, has re cuperated and won out." Gibson pointed to the Tommy Ryan "Mysterlous" Billy Smith bout, etRgod in Coney Island years ago, as on in stance to support his claim that a groggy, almost helpless fighter can "come back" and win. "Ryan wns hanging onto the ropes, a pitiful looking object," said Gibson. "Smith rushed In and shot a blow to Ryan's hend. He intended It to be a finisher, hut Instead that blow cleared Ryan's brain and he came around In rtantly, fought like a wild man and won. "The Bomhnxder Wells-Al Palser fight, fought In New York a few years ftKO, is a more recent instance." con tinued Oihson. "Wells gave Palzer a terrific beating In the first round and In tha second 1'alzer was In such shape' that th erowd begged the referee, to stop the hout and prevent a murder. In the third well, in that third round Palter came out of his dace, shot a ter rific wallop to Walls' stomach and Walls went down for tha complete count. "Years ago Kid McCoy and Tom Phnrkey met. The kid started off by lenSing a punch on Sharkey that was so terrific that the big Irishman went down like an ox. Sharkey couldn't get up but the boll at the end of tha round saved him. Throughout the early rounds, McCoy cut Sharkey to ribbons, but Sharkey recuperated and won.. "Joe Woloott made a chopping block cut of Kid Lavlgnfe In the early rounds of their wonderful fight. The rowd Insistently pleaded with the referee to stop- the 'slaughter' of the white mai. Hut he didn't and the 'Kid' cams back and won. "Peter Maher knocked Bob Fltzsim mons flat, but Bob won out in the end. Maher won from Choynskl after the wonderful Jewish lad had made a punching bag of him in the early fight ing. Terry McGovern was In an al most helpless condition during one stage of his fight wl?h Oscar Gardner yet Terry won the fight. "When Coffey fought AI Roich, he was groggy In the first round, but he , won by kno kout. Jim Flynn, Arthur' Pelkey and Jack ("Twin") Sullivan ha". Coffey daxnd and seemingly help less, but Coffey csme back and beat each of them 'and with a knockout punch. "I know that Brown did what lie' thought was fair and honorable, but I always will feel that If the fight had 1 oiitirmed. Coffey's grogKlrieMi would. j j,v. Imv have 'liny pp eared and that ha would a beatim Moran derisively. - - -. 1 - '- This hook sums op all wa bts learned atwat rapture during forty ear ut ieruut. Sbowa joat wby eiaatia and spring traaaps t iuc ruyiww waa a wunv iwuiri. Etpoaea tha bnmbug "ipplisaces," "ftietb- od.,f pUters," etc. . - KxpIaGu wby atratlna la saarly always a naadlesa gamble with death aad wby. eveu I yoo manage to live through It. yoa siay b7;Jaw WX.'SSi-i. ,h.'- Mf, fe, bu, .aytbing f ruptara aad b,w th4 ciglb i, tba only thing you can gat on auch a long trial beesaae Ue only ttiug good taongk to ittnd met a test, Ioo't fail to gat this book don't pnt tt erf tba muiuta it tak you to writs for it stay fna yoa from ruptuta troublra for tba raat . . 'a This Brine It Sox 819 CLTTTHZ ooxrajrr . . laS Cart C84 St. Xsw York City aad ase year Free Book aad Trial Off sf ir ... f ''.. -S?" Vafaa .............. Addrea ';...;;.... . a