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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1919)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 30, 1919. "Kdltor Wit met KmU Barglar," bortlee headUae. 3fet that w carry asrtalng tet kirjUr. fcU w like. to in It- la prist. , ,. The t League of- Nations Will Be No Federal League, Me Hearties We rad where Kltty Gerdaa showed a ta Saa Fraaolseo with 41 traaas Doaft let the almi see this. v ! WHen the SEASON. OPENS ... reKT -TUESDAY 4 . ' I .J up ft a 'I K . . i . : . i - i i ! - , CLEMSON TOURNEY BILLED FOR TODAY ON GUN CLUB TRAPS One Hundred Target Handicap in Honor of Ex-President of Club Will Attract Many Shooters; Fourteen Prizes Hung Up; Colo rado Man May Oppose Troeh in Special Match in June. OVER fifty trapshooters from Portland and, vicinity will face the Portland Gun club traps today in the 1 100-target handi cap in honor of John G. Clernson,' former, president of the club, who will leave next month for Pittsburg. The event will be shot under added bird handicap rules. i Fourteen prizes have been hung up for the shooters. Five solid silver trophies will be offered to the first five high guns. The next four high guns will receive a percentage of the sweepstakes purse, v The five low shooters will be offered an equal share of T20 of Hoover's doughnuts. Non-members of the club and visitors are eligible to compete for the trophies, which are among the best ever offered in. club competition. The entrance fee in the shoot is $5, three of which will be deducted' for the price of the targets. Members desiring to shoot for the trophies only, and not in the sweepstakes, will have to pay an entrance tee oi Each contestant In thin shoot will receive a number of added targets at which he must shoot, the num- . ber broken to be added to the total registered on the 100-targets. This -system has been tried in the East and in other coast gun dubs and has proved . successful. The handicaps - will be allotted by Arthur K. Downs, H. B. Newland and E. H. Keller. Kbeoting Starts at A. M. A number of shooters from Wil lamette valley points will be on hand to tarticlpate in this event and it . is likely that several from the Col ombia river points will be entered. , This is the first 100-bird race of the present' season and will afford an opportunity to get in condition .. top tii. state championship ehoot to be Btaged later at Pendleton. The event will be shot in four strings of 15 targets each and two . strings of 20 targets each. The shooting will start promptly at 9 :30 o'clock. A hot lunch will be served . at the grounds. " ,:. King May Oppose Troeh Should William Hi Heer of Guth- rie, Okla., refuse to accept the chal lenge to be Issued by the Portland Gun club in behalf of Frank, M. . Troeh for a SOO-target match -race during the Northwest tourney to be staged June 21, 22. 23 and 24, it is expected that R. A. King, the Colo- . rado state champion, will face the Vancouver shooter. ...King is a great shooter and It is said that he has plenty of backer. "In the recent Sunny South Handi cap at Houston, Texas, King nosed Troeh out on 650 targets by a mar. , gin of one bird. . The gun club officials are prepar ing the challenge and it will be an nounced in the very near future. It v will be a direct deft to Heer, but "should the Oklahoma man pass it : up. the challenge will be declared :Open and it is believed that King will accept it. Some of the mem bers of the Club are hoping that Harry Lorenson, the Southern Cali fornia shooter, will accept the defi. Lorenson wanted to shoot Troeh when the Heer match was arrarsged last year at Seattle and if he still The A 7k T . sOf m - T for Spring .-- IP YOU haven't seea them you ought to soor they're the best yet; waist- seams in single 'and double-breasted r models.; new-ideas in the Varsity suits ; , , waist-seams in .overcoats. New touches ; in business clothes.. . ;Hart:Schaffner & Marx have given us the best of everything; ' we'If 'show '.you ; Suits for Men V - .... . . - ' . of all agesin all models all fabrics - $30;4$35; $40 And . Up SAM'L ROSENBLATT & CO The MerTs Store for Quality and Service desires to shoot against the Vancou ver 'man, it might be possible that a three-cornered race can be ar Baagay Heads fehooteni Robert H. Bungay oti Ocean Park was the leading amateur shooter in California in 1918 with an average of .8700. He shattered 1552 out of 1S00 targets. R. M. Arnold ot Los Angeles broke 97 out of 100: tar gets. , O. N. Ford of San Jose shot at 9740 targets during the year and hung up the" remarkable percentage of .9602. He broke 9094 targets out of the number thrown. , Hugh 1'oston. who is well known In the Northwest, was high profes sional with a mark of .9464. Guy Holohan of Los Angeles averaged .8980 on 2900 targets. Mrs. C. E. Groat of los Angeles . was the . best of the women' shooters with a percentage of .9213. Mrs. .Groat broke 1474 out of 1600 targets. "' Kotes ef,-Shooters A number of members of the Port land Gun club plan to motor to Pen dleton to participate in the annual Oregon state trapshooting eham- " plonahlp event to be staged May 4, 6. 6 and 7. Among them are Dr. C. F. Cat hey, P. J. Holohan.' Charles B. Preston and E. .G. Hawman. Holohan also plans to drive to Lew iston, Ida., and to Yakima, Wash., during the summer to participate in shoots. Mark Rickard of Corvallis, Or., is shooting in great style this season and if he continues he will be among the leaders in the state tourney. Rickard's best shooting last season was during the Pacific Indians shoot at Crescent Lake. .Mrs. Ada Schilling, one of the best women shooters in the West, aver aged .8836. Het average was con tained among - the California list, which was . recently' issued. Mrs. Schilling broRe 782 out of 8S5 tar gets."' : . Frank M. Troeh of Vancouver, Wash., and his brother, Elaine, may es . Copyilgbt 1919 1 - liSk ' . v.h:f -$ wA-i i TURNERS TO V 'yr'Jr -riey - H "vL ..-n-n.,., sar; , yjr (T . " " i -'Vrr--frV - - 2 lv v- . - 'jfl - Some of the-Portland Social Turn Verein members who will appear in annual exhibition to be held next Saturday evening at the Heillg ? theatre. Reading from the left above, are: Octiia Leiek, Tiny Schilling, Cecil Bavor, Gladys Goldstaub and Ethel .O'Brien. Below Cecilia Leick and Cornelia Bavor and Ethel ..O'Brien, ' I . : j . , enter - the Idaho state championship event to be held April 27, 28 and 29. It is not likely that- any local shooters with the exception of P. J. Holohan will enter the event on ac count of the fact that the Oregon state shoot will be staged the follow ing week. The plan of the Pendleton club to allow but ojie team from each club to enter the championship three-man event is not meeting with favor and it is likely that this event will be thrown open, allowing as many teams to represent one club as pos sible. It is estimated there are 75,000 golf players in the Dominion of Canada. Hats for Spring- They're Here Hut Sthaffncr & Mart : GascoBldg. Fifth and Alder GIVE ANNUAL EXHIBITION SATURAY AT HEILIG He Makes Sleep Possible SOUTHPAW RAPP CLEANS UP WATERFl Good Folk May Honor of these days" the good citizens f Crockett, Cal., will rear a pile of stone to the memory of Frank Rapp, left-handed pitcher of. as they say of . the : corkscrew curled spinster, uncertain years. There have been monuments to the Argonauts who followed the western n n sun to the gold lands of California, the fourty-niners, who died of thirst, of hunger, of beat and of cold; who braved the Indian arrow and the .. -renegade bullet in -quest of the gold- : en fleece. ' . There ; have been towering peaks ; - named foe the. - proud old Spanish ; t Pons .who . crept northward along ?' i'the shoreline from their conquest , - of the Aztecs, and planted the saf- . f ron - banner . of Hlspania on the 1 " whispering sands ' of the ' Gotden t Gate.. , . ,s . -V.--V- , Thea the Daring Mwk There are missions, piled stone on ' , stone, as monuments to -the - brave -t and pious padre who- followed in the wake of -the conqueror and taught ; tho naked savage the great word There have rbeen settlements' - named for - the adventurous Rus sians, who pushed down from nor-' , thernmost.Alaska and founded their houses of -worship amid the fragrant ' eucalyptus and. the blossoming pep-' pep tree' beside the quiet mountain' stream. "V -l - . ; , There r-p have ' been :.. streets and ' squares named in honor of some ' hardy soul who gave his all for "My : California. The . crowning monu- ; ment is ..th. great state highway ' with its double backbone stretching - - from Tia Juana to 'the Siskiyous anl its thousand ribs reaching out to the -remotest counties. ' Warned for Old Darr , And even, this lltle city, the aprlng ; home of the Portland baseball club. Is not without Its halcyon interest.' - Kvery schoolboy knows the story of that period when the west was fig MEow young and the John Fremonts and the Kit Carsons and the, Davy Crocketts found no elbow room ath wart the Mississippi. Davy Crockett and the Alamo are one and Insep arable In the- memory of the pres ent Back of Beyond. There are those of us who live their lives in the dear, dead Past. There are more of us who find our pleasures In the present. Among us are some who are hopeful of the fu ture. Of those who dwell In tho Interme diate stage, few monuments pierce the aky in their honor. Therefore Frank Rapp, left bander, may hope to see no visible sign of. memory so long as he is in the Quick, but some of these days they will honor him, if not In the Bay District, then at least in Crockett. The Tower of Babel When the Portlanders . arrived In this little city of sugarmills and green hills, sleep was at a premium. . The 24-hour a day operation of the refinery made its noise, it la true, and the trains shrieked through the yards at half hour intervals. . But that was as nothing to the contin- -ual mewing, the yowling, the cater wauling from the waterfront ; It was as a thousand sirens turned loose at once. " It came from the teredo eaten piling of the docks. It came from every anchor chain on every vessel In the harbor; It had even-become so ' common that every back fence and every clothesline as' far up the hill as Loring avenue, had -its nightly visitation. But that Is no longer. The popu- lace sleeps from twilight to dawn. It sleeps the sleep of the just. It sleeps ! It sleeps! It sleeps! Ralph Rapp, left caught every catfish 'traits. : r hander. ' has ' In Carquinez TURNERS TO STAGE BIG SHOW Annual Exhibition Under Super vision of Prof. Richard Genser owski Billed for Saturday. 'THE annual exhibition of the Port- land Social Turn Vereln will bo staged in the Hellig theatre next Satur day evening under tne personal super vision of Professor Oenserowskl. Thl year's program will surpass any ever held by the organization. The various classes have been working on their num bers for several weeks. The big feature of the program will be the dance arranged ; by Professor QenserowRki in honor of the returning soldiers. The following will participate in the number, which is a solo toe dance : Nadino Haehlen, Cornelia Bavor, Qladys Ooldataub, Tiny Schilling, Ethel O'Brien and Cecilia Leick. , Another feature of the program will be the Glow Worm Idyll. The senior members will give a series of exercises on the horizontal bars and also on horses. The comDlete brogram la: The Gena march, composed by Hiss C. MatUngly. Grand Kntrance. all classes. Tableaux The Greatest Mother of Our Boys. Free-hand exercises and folk dance E-amea by the First Girls class. Dumb bell exerclsea over there, by the First Boys' class. ' Tho Glow Worm Idyll, calisthenics, esthetic and fancy steps with song by the Arlon P. S. T. V. Special lighting ef fects. -Apparatus work on horizontal and parallel bars, horse and bock and trench games, by the Second Boys' Class. Dreamland dance, Gilbert's classical and fancy dancing. Second Girls' class. Seniors on horizontal bars. Wand exercises combined, . Second Ln dies' and Business Men's classes. . Welcome home dance, composer, Rich ard Genserowskt. f Pryamlds by Seniors. GRAYS HARBOR CLUB TO STAGE MANY TOURNEYS Invitational Tournament Planned for Labor Days; Club title Events in September. Aberdeen, Wash., March 29. Presi dent W. J. Patterson of the Grays Har bor Country club contemplates staging an invitational golf tourney during the rirst week in September. All clubs In the Northwest will be asked to send representatives to this tournament. President Patterson hopes also to be ables to arrange a series of intercity matches. The regular club season will open next Saturday, and will close' November 22. Various tourneys have been arranged for each weekend and It Is hoped that this year will be the greatest In the history of the club. The W. J. Patterson trophy contest will open Memorial day.. The H. . P; Brown trophy wit be at stake In play that opens July 4. This will be a handi cap event and women) will be eligible to participate on an equal footing with the men. v.- The " 'dub's championship tourney is billed to start Labor Day and th wo men's championship September . OREGON WILL SENDr FINE AGGREGATION TO COLUMBIA MEET i ; Coach Bill Hyaward to Select Team for Indoor Meet in Tryouts to Be Held This Week; Two Lettermen Are "on the Squad; ' Have Big Schedule for This Season. V' T T NIVERS1TY OF OREGON, Eugene, March 20. Oregon I will be represented with a strong track squad in the Colupi-; ;; . bia indoortrack meet April lrS. Coach Haywardhas not se lected the team yet, but intends to hold try-outs- this week, afjer which he will select a number of the most promising men to rep resent the lemon-yellow in the Portland meet. Men from both the varsity and the freshmen squads will be numbered 'in the team, as there are several first year men who are showing up, bet ter in some events than" are. the varsity candidates. ' toacii naywara has been working with a good sized nock ot varsity aspirants for the past two weeks and, despite the fact that there arj bnt two track lettermen in the group, chances for, a. championship teamthis spring are by no means dini. . ' ' , Captain Hank Foster in the speed events, Albert Ruhquist jn the weights and Don Belding in the distance events, will prove a strong point-winning combination and will be augmented by a number of other athletes who -have had experience on the frosh team or who were in service last spring. Foster and Runquist both won their letters last spring. Belding la not a letter man, but before his en listment two years ago he led Ore gon's cross-country team and was a member of the team which held the ; coast championship in the distances. He will probably run in the half, mile and two mile . events. Foster won the 100 yard dash in the Oregon O. A. C. meet last season and also placed in the 220 yard dash and the broad jump. Runquist won his let ter with the discus last spring. He is also a valuable man with, the shot and javelin. Has Strong Sprinters " Coach Hayward has lined up sev eral promising men for the dash s events -Mulkey. Masterson, Cahr- -man and Gamble. Mulkey won sev eral events ln the last state Inter Bchotaatic meet held - in Eugene in 1917 and was kept from the varsity last spring only by enlistment. Besides Belding in the distances, Hayward has Margason, Armontrout, - Jaraleson and Evon Anderson work ing in the middle distances and Bain and Parr in the mile and two mile. With the excepUon of Parr, who was a member of the team last spring, none of these men has 'had' intercollegiate . experience, but they are ehowlng aip well in practice. Oine of the moat promising can didates for varsity honors this spring Is John "Pat" Maaterson. Master- -son has good form ln the hurdles and is- speedy on his feet. Enlist ment kept him from the team last spring. Lloyd Still, a "Mexican" athlete for the past several years, to supply your every The Trout Season Opens fVf Next Tuesday , The salmon season is on. " pC! ARE yOU READY? . WE ABE READY ?: 1 : , i fishing tackle. We have by far: the largest and finest showing of rods (including -famous .Leonard and Devine rods), lines, reels,' baskets, hooks spoons, tackle boxes, etcv in Portland. Our prifces in most instances Jrvill be found lower than elsewhere for like qualities. rV Outing Apparel . We have "Duxback" and "Karnpit" outing clothing ion ..men and women. : , ' , ; . Monarch Shoe Packs $7.50? .' .?: -,..'. i - .i' ' t Extra special J 12-inch top Monarch shoe packs at; $7,Sf: The "old" $9.00 quality worth more today. All sizes. We Are Fully prepared to Supply Your Every Need for the Fishing Season 'See Our Lines! -Meier & f ., . . .. 1 lr QiurrrSrokJorrmnx9 v- ; - . in also showing form In the- hurdle events this year. Weight Mea Good In the weights, Oi-egon will be es pecially strong, this year as several experienced husky mn are In the field for honors. Starr, Ktrahan. Gilbert and Dresser will aid r Albert Runquist in this department. Among the other men who Hay ward is giving special attention to are : Mort Brown, in the broad jump, and Carter Brandon, ln : the ' pole vault. Both men were on the squad last year and. with this year's train ing under Bill, ought to develop Into point winners. A , heavy schedule of meets has been ararnged for this year's aggre gation. Besides the Columbia' meet, there will e a dual meet wtth Mult nomah, at Kugene. probably April 17. or 24. - Washington and Oregon stage a dual meet at Eugene May 9, May IS Oregon meets G. A. C. at Corval lis. The Northwest conference will - be held in Pullman May 24; and May -31 the Pacific coast conference will . -be held at Seattle. Charley Schmidt To Lead W. Li Team Charley Schmidt, former catcher for the Detroit Americans, . has signed as manager of the Sioux City club fof the Western league, according to a report from Sioux City. Schmidt was a mem ber of the - Tigers for eight years. He caught -every world's series game played by the club in the three years Detroit won the American league pennant requirement in high - grade Frank's : Sporting Goods, Sixth Floor.