The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 31, 1918, Page 20, Image 20

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Jess start out anon their brawny frames to harden,
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ewark Hews.
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- BIG NOISES OF FOUNDATION SHIPYARD BASEBALL AGGREGATION
BASEBALL
s J-
SHIPYARD BALL TEAMS
TO PLAY OPENING GAMES
'OF THE SEASON SUNDAY
Record Attendance Is Expected in Initial Contest of Willamette-
Columbia Circuit; Cornfoot and Norwesco Clubs Will Clash
on Vaughn Street Grounds; To Name Umpires.
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By George Bertz
EXT SUNDAY will mark the opening of the
Columbia - Willamette Shipbuilders' Baseball
league 6fiason. trrhe following games are sched
uled: Norwesco vs. Cornfoot at Vaughn street.
Foundation vs. Standifer-Clarkson at Van
couver. Supple & Ballin vs. Grant Smith-Porter at
St. Johns.
t Peninsula vs. St. Helens at St. Helens.
President Fred Bay has not fully decided on
the time that the games -will start, but it is pre
sumed that they will begin promptly at 2 :30
o'clock. The league's indicator handlers will be chosen during the
course of this week.
All teams are in great shape for the opening battles, a number
of teams scheduling practice games for today to put the players on
edge for the initial contests. The Norwesco club (Northwest Steel
Company) and the Cornfoot teams will play at the Vancouver bar-
Tacks with teams from the signal corps and the Supple ft Balhn
Jeam will hook up with the Piedmont Maroons at Peninsula park
. Managers of the various teams
e 'Will announce their lineups during
V the -week. They all seem confident
- of winning the pennant, and an ex
" reliant brand of ball la expected to
t ba dinned out by the shipyard work-
- rn.
J - Tforwesoo Has Pepper
. Managtr RunHell of the Norwesco
'. club has instilled the spirit of the
v rational pastime into the workers
at the Northwest Steel company
Y yards, and it- is believed that this
. company will turn . out a record
J breaking number of fans at the game
at the Vaughn street grounds. The
' Cornfoot team will pitch either
V, "Suds" Sutherland or Bert Fltch-jf,-ner
against the Norwesco club.
"Lefty" James, who pitched for
the Portland Beavers last season.
1 ill, pitch the opening game for the
c, Foundation team against Vancou
ver. . way no narnam win pi ten tna
-opener for the Grant Smith-Porter
team, while Al Zweifel will hurl
for the Supple & Ballin outfit.
;
-t V To Arrange Parade
' ... Chairman Spangier of the parade
committee has called a meeting for
" . Tuesday noon, at which all details
' of the big parade to be held Satur-
li div nioiit will h unrVnd nnt in
dications are that between 4000 and
6000 shipyard workers will partlcl-
fcr
. i Tm t Jk In thu riaraHa u-KtU ..(11
. ... uu, . i . . nil. Blftlk
:". promptly at 8 o'clock.
u Uoyd J. Wentworth and a num
. ; bar of other prominent members of
tha emergency . fleet corporation
have been Invited to lead the line of
march, Tha Foundation. Norwesco.
u 14
Supple & Ballin, Cornfoot and Grant
Smith-Porter yards will haVa their
bands in the parade. The owners of
the various yards have also been re
cruested to participate in the proces
alon. .
Sconti for Players
Manaper Rogers of he St Helens
rlub will return Monday or Tues
day from the Puget, Sound district,
where he has been endeavoring to
sign up several players. In view of
the fact that an effort is being made
to have the Shipyard league in Seat
tle run under amateur rales, it is
likely that Rogers will be able to
snare a number of good players
from that district.
The Standifer-Clarkson people
have been handicapped in putting up
their park. Negotiations are under
way to lease grounds, and as soon
as' it la signed 50 carpenters will
bo put to work erecting a grand
stand and bleachers.
Four Portland Tossers Ordered
to Hurry Westward to Training
Camp at Pendleton.
L-
No Crickets This Year
Tha Halifax cup cricket classic will
not ba held this year. It has for years
been one of the feature events of the
season among eastern organizations.
Last year for the first Ume. the cup.
wnicn originated yi liaiiiax, M. a., waa
won by New York eleven. Previously
the Philadelphia clubs usually woo the
emblem. .
Georgia Tech, University of Georgia,
Mercer university and rfluburn are to
engage In a four cornered baseball se
ries March 29 to May 4-
Manager Harry Cason (on the extreme right) manager of the Foundation company team of the Columbia-Willamette Shipbuilders' Caseball league, and a trfo of his stars. From left to
right, the others are: "Brownie" Groce, outfielder and captain; Bill Gleason, former catcher of the Oakland Coast league team, and "Lefty" James, who pitched for tne Portland
Beavers last season. James and Gleason will do the brunt of the battery work for the Foundation team.
Here's an Awful
Place to Stick
An Irish "Cox"
Colombia university may put a
craw composed entirely of Chinese
en the Hudson at soon as Ice clears
this spring. Jim Bice, coach, today
announced definitely that tha school
wonld have a crew and was ready
to sign for races with the eastern
colleges. In speaking of the Chinese
he tald he bad plenty of material
for an entire Oriental crew, bat
might pnt in an Irish coxswain.
Manhattan Shirts $2 to $10
Wear clothes
Stetson Hats $5 and $6
OonyrlshtBaia Boastaac Kars
that are cheerful
THIS Spring it's a part of your duty to
wear stylish clothes; clothes that
look cheerful and help you to fael that
way. There's big work ahead for all of
us and the more cheerfully we go at it,
the better we'll do it.
It's cheerful also to wear clothes that
save money for you. Good clothes will
do it but' be sure they're good- We
don't sell any other kind; we make cer
tain that they're good for you that
makes them good for us. i
Hart Schaffner &,Marx
clothes ire good clothes
They're cheerful clqthes-ecause : -
thy're fStylish;4)artcause-i4r;'
they save mcmeybrycm:H
$25, $30, $35 and up to $50-
Sahi'l Rosenblatt: Go.
, Southeast Corner Fifth and Alder
SOX TEAMS
LOOK LIKE
THE CLASS
Chicago- and Boston Appear to
Have Edge in the American
league Pennant Race.
Dickerson Manages
Multnomah Squad
Paul Dickenson baa been named man
ager of the Multnomah baseball team.
The club players will veport for prac
tice soon. Plans are afoot for the or
ganization of the Myltnoraah Sunday
Morning Baseball league.
NEW YORK, March 30. (I. N. a)
The two Sox teams white and red
still stand out as the strongest combin
ations in the American league.
As the season of IBIS draws near
and the bugs start speculating on the
chances or the various oipbs in tne
pennant race, the new world's champs
and their bitter rivals in Boston de
mand a majority -of attention.
Other teams in the Ban Johnsonian
circuit have- been strengthened in vari
ous ways. Some have lost strength thati
cannot be regained. But the fact re
mains that the White Sox, bolstered
i with the confidence that cornea to a
winning team and standing pat on the
roster that won the American league
pennant last year and then forged its
iigure again una year.
JTew Flayers Stars 7
And those Boston Sox," bolstered by an
i influx of playera of the highest calibre
to take the places of the stars who have
entered the service of Uncle Sam. must
be figured practically on the same basis.
The recent .news that the White Sox
are reasonably aura of keeping Urban
Faber means much to Chicago. With a
lineup intact. Clarence Rowland has little
j Ul UUL41M1S. vv nun .UUUM wiw
j pitchers come through particularly Ed
die juicotte as iney aia iasi year, rc wiu
! take a mighty sweet ball club to beat
them out.
The writer isn't picking Chicago to win
the pennant in this article. It isn't quite
time to pick anybody. But from this dis
tance, the pennant looks like a tough ar
gument between the Sox teams.
i. . i m . i ..
THIRTY RIDERS
PARTICIPATE IN
JUNIOR EVENT
PORTLAND STAR
ILL WITH BROWNS
Hortense Bleaker Finishes First
on Henrietta; ladies' Closed
Chase Next Saturday.
Mounted on Henrietta, Hortense
Bleaker won the Junior . closed paper
chase of 'the Portland Hunt club.' One
of the largest fields of Junior rider par
ticipated In tha event. Susannah Piatt
on Blue Bell waa aecena ana Hooert
Coffey on Bird finished third. The
hares were Flora Jane Uenefea aad
E3sa . Meier.
The -event started at the clubhouse
and finished at Ntamith, a distance of
about four miles. Weather conditions
were ideal. About 40 attended tha -re
ception at tha clubhouse.
James Iicol, M. F. announced
ladies' closed paper chase, which will
count on the scoring on the Multnomah
hotel trophy, for next Saturday after
noon. Harry M. Kerrou writ ba tha har,
Saturday, April IS. th juniors will hold
a cross country naa, wnica wm. Da Jol
lowed by a dinner dance. .
cnvWy4liii fir
p i A. -'. ' ?A t
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I , ? ; - ? J. i ? - -'I I
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What's the Lawf Today?
BOX. COM. HERALD OF GOOD HUMOR
Just Too Late For Barnum
x. ds. .. -x - r ra i wt m it vic
3 fcLdb&3kxiii fci
Ken Williams, Portland outfielder,
with St. Louis Americans T ho haf
' been ill ' and unable to practice
much with : Fielder Jones team at
. Shre veport,
JEXT to the Bullshevik and Bob
Blewett, the funniest thing in
the wide, wide world is the Port
land boxing commission. And it is
getting funnier all the time. . Too
bad that Phineaa T. and his circus
are non-exlstant. It's like listening
to Al Jolson ; you don't know what
is coming next. But as long as
fandom is well entertained and the
laughing Is continuous, who cares.
Adam, whether Sullivan & Considlne
went broke.
The latest laugh producer as ex
pounded by the brethren of tha
commission was the Great Trans
formation Act, the evolution of
Frank Barrleati from a main event
boxer among the great second class
7tnrt raters of the Pacific Coast Jo
a first rate second class boxer""ln
Portland. Do you get It?
Doom! Boom! Boom!
'Because' Barrieau lost a main
event to Valley Trambltas the other
night, ba la doomed in Portland.
Commlsaionatically he Is consigned
to the B class of local boxers and
ho can't box another main event.
He may box a seml-wLndup or a
preliminary, but he cant box a
main event until he has gone away
from town and beaten Mike Gibbons
or Billy Mlske or Mike O'Dowd. Or.
.mayhap, he'll have to whale the tar
out of J. Willard before he can qual
ify again.
Where Barrieau made hla mis
take with the comVnission waa in
not been knocked out. If he'd been
cuckooed he'd have been all to the
gravy. For example, there la tha
case of Alex Trambltaa Alex for
got to duck and hit the canvas for
a count of 10, or it may have bean
a hundred. And a few weeks later
there was the' gallant little Rou
manian right back In tha ring in
another main event.
Ue BBoald Ba Prepared
So the boxer should be careful in
the future. Ha might ask the ref
eree along about tha one hundred
seventy-fifth second of the sixth
round about his chances, and if that
personage gave him the negative
wag of the noodle, he could stick
out his chin and go to sleep. Pain
ful, of course, but quits nacessary if
one is to keep in the good graces of
one's boxing commission.
Also there Is the loophole for the
boxer who doesn't walk on tha dol
lar side of the street, but who Is
beating an aristocrat of tha ring.
Even though tha former had a
chance to kayo the latter, he could
revenge himself by refusing to per
form the function. This, -according
to the commission, would automat
ically make a clasa B fighter of the
hated rival and vengeance would
. thus ba complete,
VERYTHINO is lovely and tha gooae
(a tthraa bv the heels, according -
to William Wallace McCredle. he of; tha
M alien a food stars. -,s
The judge la back from the Seattle v
schedule meeting and full of the old
nan. We are going to have a grand r-
little baseball season, everything is har '.
montous and everybody is out te,cop ;.
the pennant In the Pacific Coast Inter- ;
national league, tha longeat-handlad .
circuit at freedom. ,
The Judge kept the phone wires burn
ing yesterday with calls to tha paaaen
ger agents to shoot transportation from ;
the East to Pendleton for several play
era. Those mho ware In tha first draft"
were Charley HoUocher's younger
brother at Sti Louie, George Pembroke
at Cleveland. William Shoup at Chicago,
and Jack Dempsey. a left-handed first
sacker, at Rock Island.
Lee Beat Ticket Later
Clifford Lee, who Is whiling hls'tlme
at Denver, will be eent passage to Pen
dleton tomorrow or next day. !
A letter was received yesterday from
Walter McCredle. at Porterville. Ha ;
said that ha had been at Bakerafleld
to aee Pitchers Kenneth Penner and
Jean Debuc who were Injured last ,'
week in an automobile smash, and who -were
in the Baker sfleld hospital. Pen
ner is out of danger, but in a lot of -pain,
aaya Mac.
"It's a good thing your boys are here
or the Salt Lake club would be In worse
ahapo than It is," wrote Mac. Tha . '
pitching staff is in a bad way." '
Mac writes that Catcher Gomes has
been released, as Manager Fisher did
not like his style. Fisher thinks he will .
b well fixed for the Northwestern clr-
cult, and by this time Is probably on
hla way north to Portland.
Shona It Portland Property
An official document was received
from Secretary Barnard of the Cleve
land club, stating that Player Shoup.
who waa with Evansvllle last year, had .
been ordered to report to Portland. His
home Is In Chicago. , , .
The contract of Clifford Caaad. a
left-handed first-baseman from Wash- -ington
State college, signed by Doe
but he will not report until , college
closes in June. Counting Manager
Fisher, the judge now has three left
handed first-basemen enrolled.
A letter waa also received from Dock
Cook, who waa released, stating 4 that '
he had passed up two equally good of
fers to accept that of Portland, and
that the judge would hear from him
later. Whether this la a threat .or a
promise the judge doesn't know.
BIG ENTRY LIST
IN TEN PIN MEET
AT SPOKANE, WN.
sssaBBaaBSpseBea j
Portland Will Send Three Teams"
to Northwest Bowling Con-
gress Next Week. ,
C0WLER SPEAKS
RIGHT UP ABOUT
BATTLE ABILITY
English Tom Asserts He Had
Fulton Out, but Referee
Forgot.
Chicago,- March 80. (L N. B.) Tom
Cowler and Manager Al Lippe, arrived
here today on their way to Minneapolis
where on ' April 2 Cowler tackles Billy
Miake in a JO-round contest. This pair
has been matched four times but on
every occasion the match was called off.
On April 8, Cowler meets Jack Demp
sey in St. Louis, He says ha can beat
both men and will then demand recog
nition, by Fulton before Fred tackles
Jess WUJard.
"I knocked out Fulton in our last en
gagement but the referee failed to count
until five seconds had passed and then
he made every count two second a Had
he acted immediately Fred would have
been on the floor at the 10 count. Tha
referee didnt do it intentionally. He
was surprised and he forgot his duty."
said Cowler.
- The date of the Dempsey-Miaks match
scheduled for St. Paul has been shifted
to May 3. It was originally set for April
26. Cowler has much praise for Fulton
and says his left hand will prove quite a
factor in the Willard fight.
- .-"1" ijm ' y j ..! j ,1.1 , .
There has been a steady ' increase in
the annual pes capita consumption of
tobacco fat France .for several years un
til now It Is la excess of S3 ounces. -
; .' .V . ' j'.
Miss Bjurstedt Wins
Indoor Tennis Title
New Tork, March . 10. (L N. S.)
Miss Molla Bjurstedt. .lb - Norwegian
girl, regained the national Indoor ten
nis championship in the finals today of
the woman's indoor tournament held at
the Seventh regiment arniory. Mies
Eleanor Gosa, star player of the New
York Tennis club, met the invincible
Molla In the final match and forced her
to display her best brand of playing to
capture the title. The score was 3-,
6-1. -; ; .' -
Miss Bjurstedt has been recognized for
four yean as the queen of the net fame
when played out-ef-doera, but Miss Gosa
also is a better player there than on
the Indoor courts.
Miss Bjurstedt lost the first sat of tha
matoh today and then ateadied down.
bringing into play soma of her tricks
which carried her to Victory in the sec
ond set. Miss Gess forced a lead of 4-t
In the last set. but was unable to finish
ahead.
. Miaa Goes, with Mrs. Spencer Fuller
ten Weaver as a partner, won Jhe dou
bles championship, defeating Miaa Carol
la winn and MrsiHoraer 8. Green in
the final match. -3, U-.
Greek Wrestler Is
Called totfoinAnny
James Thores, the Greek lightweight
wrestler, was among those-called to tha
colors 1 the last draft and he is now
stationed at Camp Lewis. Thores, al
though not an American. Is strong for
nis 1. nnie oammy. ana w rarm ta go"
ten France. :- While t at j. Cams Lewis.
Thores wilt endeavor m secure a eeupla
According to word received ? by
Charles Kruse, president of the Padfio
Northwest International Bowling asso
ciation, 45 five-man teams wilt partici
pate in the 1918 congress, which open
in Spokane a week from tomorrow.
Epokane will be represented, br 25
team a Seattle is sending five teams to
the tourney and Portland will be repre
sented by three clubs, the Portland Al
leys, Portland Beavers and the M. X
Kllnea The Kline team recently re
turned from the Pacific coast congress
at Los Angeles.
Had conditions been normal., this
year's tournament at Spokane would
have been tha biggest ever held in the
Northwest. . .
Long Can Get Little
Old $100If He Wants
The St. Louis Cardinals offered Tommy
Long a contract calling for 4(0 a month.
He Dameo, wnereupon waivers were se
cured on him and he was JMleased to
Vernon of the Padfio Coast' lesjrae.
where a 2S0 a month -contract Is pott
stdered a prise, this year. But Tommy
doem't care. . He can stay heme In Ala
bama and make hie little old flea, a
month working and !e baseball go toi
k
GeU $10 Wolf Bounty
Janesville. Wis.. March JO. Tha first
Ham been killed ty LeRoy OrnawJt.
wHt rlsv!mrl ttu 11 ft Knnnt nmiA Wtf the
" - ww ws ewM H-IIW
county for the animal's scalp. Grenawalt '
wounded tbe animal at the first shot.
put tnao paa to pursue It ?0Q yards ta
Home Dates of;?
' Portland Team
Pertiasd's vhedsie r
pri v iy e Vancouver. .
May to 12 Aberdeen transferred
from Aberdeen). r - i .
Mav 27 in Jfntia 5 SMWatiA - t-:9
-une t to a gaturdav and Buniav'
Jum Ifl A ItAKnrla . - ; 1 .
July to i4r-yancouver
t July it to' a--aattla.. v
'August a to 11-Sookane.
August XI to IS (Saturday and Pun
day transferred from- Vancouver) .Van
, A bgust - J a to , 1 8 Aberdeepv J 4'-'FPtember-3
te TsxmeXr.K
Kantmh 1A t 1 Lfirwslr ft Asa r suae vi at-
fanra4 Xrom IpokXasj.