, 2U :. . THE OREGON CTATESMAN. SALEM. 'OREGON ; ' . - - SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 8, 1922 : . ' liaiMiiglMBMIIMlllllBBBIIIM S(F(Q)TSHere, Tftere and Everywhere : RESULTS SHOW WAY TEAMS 1 : FARED IN OPENING GAME Hi' tor" ;t Stanford 9; Olympic club 27. 4t Berkeley: i California 80; Untied. States Marines 0. , At Portland: Multnomah 20; Astoria Athletic club. 0, ,At Seattle: Montana 0; Wash. !non 2(. 'At Eugene: Oregon 37; Willa mette University 0.. -",iAt Tacoma: Gonzaga 15; Col lege of Puget Sound 0. TAt Ann Harbor: Ann Harbor l; Case 0. , : - . Clothes of Character ft t ' $25 to $50 Made to Measure i material of your ovm-'crrrosrnK ana maae rm the style, that best suits Z Kit and workmanship pos- ;? itively guaranteed. . iuuiureuN vi me newest 1T.. J ll. I -It 1' . - 1H -.11 j ail wool materials in au V the latest and most desir. able Weaves and colorings .-from which to choose. f yourself. No obligation ' to buy. i i Scotch Woolen Mills 426 State SU .r. Vflf -' I1 '(VV " ': . SUI TS 1 . il At La Fayette: James MiUiken 0. At Pittsburg: LaFayette 7 At West Point Kansas 0. At Cambridge: Purdue 10; Pittsburg 0; Army 13; Hanrard 20; 1?; Holy Cross 0. At Hanover: Dartmouth Ma'.ne 0; . . ...... ; v At Lincoln, Neb.: Nebraska 52; South Dakota 0. At Middlebury: Williams 14; Mlddlebury 7. .At Philadelphia: Pennsylvan ia 0; University of South 0. ' At Ithaca: Cornell 66; Nia gara 0. At Washington: Georgetown 0; Lebanon Valley 6. . At Camp Randall, Wis: 41; Carlton 0. At Baltimore: Johns Hopkins 2; Mount St. Mary's 0. At Pittsburg: Carnegie Tech 27; Geneva 6. At Princeton: Princeton 5; Virginia 0. At Mlddletonl Wesleyan 21; Bowdoin 0., . At Hamilton: Colgate 19; Al legheny 0. .- ' At Ames; Coe 24,; Ames 0 At Chicago: Northwestern University 17; Beloit 7 At East Lansing. Mich: Aggies 7;' Albion 3U. , At Columbus: Ohio State 6; Oh.o Wesleyan 0 At Atlanta: Georgia Tech 19; Davidson 0. At Crawfordsville: Wabash 21; Iako Forest 0. At Bloomington, Ind: 0; De- pauw 0, tie. At Valpariso: Kalamazoo Nor. mat 7; Valpariso 0. At Minneapolis: North Dakota 0; Minnesota 22. At Danville: Center. 55; Mis sissippi 0. At State College: Penn state 20; Gettysburg 0. At Washington, Pa: Washing ton and Jefferson 19; Bethany 7. At Terre Haute: Hose. Poly Institute 19; Hanover college p. At trooings: South-; Dakota state 12; St. Thomas 0. At Hwarthmore Swarthmore 21; Ursinus 0. " At Lewisburg, Pa Bucknell 5 J Susquehanna 0. u t At lajjhattaii jWashburn 0 ; Kansas Aggies 4. : -At iex.hgt6n,-Va"-tt1ftrginla Military ; iasUtutei S U HoatMHw college 0. At Btatcksburg, Va. Virginia Polytechnic 20; William and Mary 6. At Lexington Washington and Lee 14; North Carolina State 6. 1 V . At Monmouth Twa Wesley-- an t't Monmouth 7. ' 'At Nashville Vanderbik 33; Henderson Brown 0. ' ' At Richmond (Maryland 0; University of Virginia 0. At Dayton Dayton 32; Earl haro 5.- At Columbia Missouri 23 Grinnell 8. '-""'" At Bethlehem-ALehlgh 37; St. Francis 0. . " At Morgantown West Virginia 5$; Marietta 0. ' : i Ed. SQUIRE EDGEGATE -Experience Pon t I yen "THIS HE LEAGUE STANDINGS PACTIO COAST LEAGUE W. I.. Pot San FranrUro 122 r9 .639 Vernon 112 70 .615 Ioi Angeles .. if is 85. .555 SIt Like 91 101 .474 8ettl 84 104 .447 Oakland 84 108 .4:1 Portland 80 110 .421 SurMP.ntn 75 llfi .::: At Iowa City University of Iowa 61; Knox 0. At Des Moines Drake 16; Cornell (Iowa) 0. At Omaha Hamline 6; Creigh ton university 6. At Denver Colorado School of Mines .32 ; University of Wyoming 0. At Boulder University of Col orado 14; Regis college 0. At Albuquerque University of Denver 41; University of New Mexico 0. At Airfield, la. Parsons 27; Augustine 0. At Keokuk, la. Keokuk 19; Mileton college 0. At New Brunswick Rutgers 20; Fordham 15. At Waco Simmons college 0; P.aylor university 42. At Austin Texas university 41 Phillips. U, 10. At Stillwater Oklahoma A. and M., 17; Central State Teach ers college 0. YANKEES LOAF AND LOSE TO NATIONALS (Continued from page 1.) reached homen. Next. came a, clean single to left field from the bat of Pep Young, scoring Groh. The rally ended when Young was nip ped off first. The Giauts got only two hits after that and never threatened t oscore again. Right after the Giants made their c 1 u a t e r of scores,' the Y anks slapped- the ball upon the infield turf, -but as luck would hare It, all the .balls bounc ed in the orthodox way and the batters were thrown out. The Yanks were always making opportunities for themselves, on ly to turn them down in some careless manner. They might have scored three runs in the first Inning Instead two with little more audacity in going around the diamond. , They started off . as thougb Overcoats $25.00, $27.50 $30.00 They have the classy style tliat attracts attention Fall and Winter Suits m $17.50 to $30 BATES-STREET SHIRTS $250 to $5.00 Use My Stairs It Pays Chastain's Upstairs Men's Shop 122 North Commercial St l syoc rvtTW CRoiS& they had found their long lost hitting punch. Witt hit a single straight through the diamond in to center field and Dugan quick ly followed with a single to left.4 Babe Ruth took a mighty swat at the ball and drove out one of the longest fiies that ever droppe;! in to an outfielder's glove. Cun ningham canght it in deep center field, just a step or two from the bleacher fence and the force of the ball's descent knocked him against the boards. He was so far away from the plate that there! seemed to be plenty of time for Witt to come home from setond, but Manager HugKins, who was coaching at third, stopped him there. He scored later on Plfp's single. Pipj Caught At Second Pipp tried to run too , far ra ther than not far enough and was caught at second. Meusel sent Dugan home with a hot liner to right, then stole second and took third oil Snyder's wild throw to catch him at the middle sack. Scbang ended the offensive by striking out. . Bob Meusel began the Yafiks' seventh turn at bat with a roller that Groh had trouble in hand ling. On the way to first Meur sel slowed down, seemingly with ,ne tnought that it was no use to run. Otherwise he could have got thera safely, for Groh's throw was bad and Kelly dropped it and bad to step off the bag to pick It out of the mud. As it was the tlay was close: It was a few sec onds later that Ward bombarded me DieaciieTS with him nome run, making a goat of Meusel. More Honors Pulled Then came the last chance fn the ninth and the reckless dis regard of it by Huggin's men. Pipp slammed the first pitched ball dovn the left field line for two bases. He was trapped off second oa Meusel' poke to Groh. Schang got a long single into left He tried to reach second and fail ed. Ward ended the game with a fly to Meusel. Had Schang been willing to leave well enough alone when ho reached first, Bob Men sel could probably have scored "af ter his brother caught Ward's fly. Even leaving the Yanks'- base running out of it, the game would rank ts one of the sloppiest in the history of the world's series. The rain wa3 never weary. ! Detailed analysis of the pitch- ng shows that McQuillan and Mays v.orked on practically even terms. Ji.ach had one bad inning. Mc Quillan, in the first and Mays in 'he fifth. -McQuillan held 'the Yanks hitless from the first to the seventh.; whie Mays allowed no more than one hit in any inn- ng outside the fifth. Pitching- Statistics McQuillan pitched 113 times 42 of which wire balls and 2 strikes. Mays tossed to the plate 108 times in eight inning3. and lones. who worked in the ninth Ditched but seven times, all threr of the men facing him going ou on ines.- seventeen foul strikes ma iu iouis wero nicked off Mays delivery and but nine fou trikes ami four fcul3 off McQuil an. ine attendance for today'i ame was 36.242. the lowest for ny game so far and the receipt tegregRted $118,384, making the ioiai3 rjr tne four games as fbl lows: ... . Aiienuance 14. 336; receipts 'JJ. ine money for to day's same wai divided as fol . ti 1 a . . uw. i-.ayers- snare , 375. 84 each clubs share $20 125.26 commissioner". frhar $17,757.6 Xo Fight Left Broken spirits is burying the rannees in the pit of world serie J . . . ueieai m tne opinion of John tycliraw. Giant leader.. "There's no fight left in them sa.a xncviraw arter the fourth game today, "if they had been fighting, they would not have lost in the ninth Inning, for they booted several chances to tie the score. "The fifth Inning we got hits and breaks too. and we took ad vantage of every one. We won the game in that inning. Bob Meusel s haf hearted loping to first in tsP seventh costly to the Yankees. Had Meusel dashed to first. figbtVa's as he should well, figure that qut. Ward's home .run won Id have; scored him. And- then O . 1 ! a r J- , . otnang snouict never, rttmy-opin Count Here act i mta nouuu should have played for the tieing run first. Hit Fall to Score "It isn't often that a ball team gets a two bagger, a single, an infield out and a long fly with out scoring. Yet the Yankees had these in the ninth today and fail ed. "The Giants have been fight ing every inch of the way and without this fightipg spirit they would have -been perhaps three games boh ind instead of three ahead." Miller Huggins, the Yankee leader, attributed the loss of the fourth game to "the ill fortune of the game." We may have made errors of Judgment," he said, "but we were trying. We wanted to win and we took cihances. We didn't play ball as Vre can play it, I'll admit but there's no use whimpering about it. "There's left to us a fighting chance. I think we'll take u. If we lose the series we'll lose it fighting." Hush Pitches Today "Bullet Joe" Bush, chased from the game by the Giant batters in the opening game, Is to have the ob of holding off the Nationals in the fifth game tomorrow, Sam Jones, who. has finished two games for the Yankees is being held in reserve. So pleased is McGraw with the pitching ta.ff that the experts call "inferior," that he may give the youthful Ryan a chance to morrow. Jonnara also is an elig ible. Nehf has had three day's rest, however, and is the logical choice. Cunningham's . work afield to- dawon McGraw's praise. Cun ningham pulled Ruth's drive off the center field bleacher wall in the first inning and then in the ninth make the throw that caught Schang at second after the Yank catcher had poked a single -over second. Casey Stengel still is suffering from his lame leg and Cunning ham will stay in the field. Giant AB. R. H. PO. A. E Bancroft, ss . Groh, 3b .3 1 2 3 3 0 .4 .3 .4 .4 .4 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 4 1 3 8 3 4 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 Frisch, 2 b E. Meuself If. foung, rf . . . Kellyi lb... 0 0 o - 1 Cunning'm, cf . 3 Snyder, c .... 4 McQuillan, p .4 1 Totals . . .33 4 9 27 11 Yankees Witt, ef 4 1 "2 4 0 Dugan. 3b ..4 1 1 0 4 Ruth, rf . . . . 3 0 0,1 0 Pipp. lb .'. ... 4 0 2 12 2 R. Meusel, If . .4 0 1 5 0 Schang, c .... 4 0 1 1 1 Ward, 2b 4 1 1 0 2 Scott, S3 .... 2 0 0 4 2 May. p 2 0 0 0 3 Jones, p 0 0 0 0 0 Elm'r Smith x. 1 0 0 0 0 Totals . . .32 3 8 27 13 x Batted for Mays in 8th. Summary Two-oase hits, Mc Quillan, Witt. Pipp; home run. Ward; stolen base, R. Meusel; sacrifice, Frisch; double plays. Cunningham to Frisrh, Frisch to Bancroft to Kelly, Pipp to Scott; left on bases. Yankees 4, Giants 5; .base on balls, off Mays 2 (Cun ningham and Bancroft); off Mc Quillan 2 (Ruth and Scott); by Mays 1 (McQuillan), by Mc Quillan 4 (Schang, R. Meusel. Ward. Elmer Smith) ;. hits off Mays. 9 in 8 innings; of Jones, none in one inning." ' Umpires Owens (American), umpire In chief at plate; Klem (National), first base. Hildebrand (American), second base McCor mick (National), third base. Time 1:54. 1H GEO. C. WILL Closing Out Piano and Phonograph Stock New Phonographs y.. Price. $1 down, $1 week: up. Pianos $89 up; terras $5 down, $5 month up. See Ad. on last page of second section IT vv3.H3 C r CQ -Torn to yE44 AMD I KAM 5flMt THIMt-K CUV T T Football Team Fast, But Lacks Poundage, Says Coach Kasberger MOUNT ANGEL COLLEGE. St. Benedict, Ore., Oct. 7. Coach Kasberger says that the football prospects at Mount Angel college are - not very bright this year, as most of the team consists of new material, oaly five lettermen from last year's squad having returned. The outlook for a championship non-conference team for Mount Angel college Is reported gloomy, as most of the team does not pos sess weight or much experience. Kansberger must rely oq speed and open formation. On the. field the M. A. C. squad clicks smoothly through signal practice night after night, but Kasberger s a y s. "Not enough weight." He must plug holes left by such men as Pillette and Con nor. Ooltz the 200 pound full back, is not returning to Mount Angel and Gallagher has gone East to college. However, five lettermen, Hud son, Cranston, Hardin, Joseph ana Lawrence Butsch are back on the joh. The tentative lineup fol lows: Center, W'ernmark; guards. Hardin, Watson, Jackson, Coffey; tackles, Pashek, Joseph, Law rence Butsch, Stockton; ends. Dyke, Spear, Cranston, Caughill, Capet, Hudson, Stockton, Mars ters, Butler, Evans; backs, Zieg- enhagen, Kohler. Blackwell, Do- Iausejcj-Brock', Stockton, Hudson.'' Following is the " Bchedulei Mount Angel vs. Oregon freshmen. October 14, at Mount Angel; Mount Angel vs. Pacific univer- I 1 1. Ml 1 NEEDS WEUT Right Styles Right Quality Right Prices -in our- 'S MEN CLOTHING $25 and $27.50 ALL WOOL SUITS AND OVERCOATS Wise buyers will get the latest styles. fine all-wool fabrics, expert tailoring and extra value at low prices. SCHOOL TOGS At Right Prices 1 Sweaters Shirts Corduroys Caps Sox Et c. THE Wm. A. Zosel BY "Bur you 4oro ao i ft. Too slty, October 21, at Forest Grove; Mount Angel vs. Albany college. November 4, at Mount Angel; Mount Angel vs. O. A! C. fresh men, November 10, at Mount An gel; Mount Angel vs. Chemawa, November 18, at Chemawa. OREGON WINS FROM BEARCAT ELEVEN (Continued from page 1.) most as humiliating for the state team: as for the Invaders. The game whs undeniably a better display of courage than of fin ished football, on both sides. Bain, who played center last year, went in as quarter, and ran the team well. Both teams rhow a wealth of good, material. " the state having the heavier men but the Bearcats showing speed and class that the season should de velop into a slashing learn. Willamette has no game for next Saturday, the 14th; the first on the regular schedule is on the 28th. with Chemawa. A game H pending with Linfield on the 21st, if it can be arranged. This 1 Llnfield's first football season for several years. Chicago Begins Football Year by Beating Georgia STAGG FIELD. Chicago. Oct. 7. Chicago opened Us football sea con with a 20 to 0 triumph over the University of Georgia today in one of the most. Important Jn- ter-sectional games of . the year. Pyott. !eft halfback, scored six noints with two drop kicks and Johnny Thomas, right half smashed over for two touch downs. Randall. Georgia's star halfback was forced out of the game in the second period because of injuries. . ,.. r- 1 TAYLOR WINS FIGHT OMAHA, Taylor, negro Neb., Oct. 7. Jack I heavyweight of I I Open Until 9 p. m. MAN'S 416 State Street LOUIS RICHARD Omaha, knocked "Battling" Jim Johnson. Pacific coast negro heavyweight in the second round of a scheduled ten round Doai here tonight. Pretty clothes are necessary to . t V . a woman unless sne cant t them. -'..- They're soft and warm without being heavy. Full " in skirt anil " shoulders for ''fctyld : ati3 ' comfort. Belted or not, aa you prefer. Our pricing will please. $18.00 to $27. 75 A. A. CLOTHING CO. .247 No. Commercial St. Overcoats ' ' ' f ! - - ,v. f. Saturdays Ellis E. Cooley U V I; ' .f V 1 : ion. . have tried to stretch his hit into two bases,- TheYalees . - -- - """""-'-- . ..