Laroy Woods! Named Manager of Portland Baseball Cfalbr CATCHER WILL ftelMJS Move Made to Resume Army -Navy Relations t L 1 W X Hr I WWW Appointment by Tom Turner j Comes as Surprise to Duck Supporters POUTLAND, Ore.. Oct. 16. i (AP (--Succeeding Bill Ron' sort, j resigned, Larry WoodalJ, catcher. today was appointed manager of ; the Portland baseball dab by President Tom Turner. Baseball fans received the an noancement with surprise. )Ji!l Essick, White Sox tk-oat or Cy Perkins, or George Barns of the Philadelphia Athletics were thought to have had the lest pro spects of receiving the, appoint ment. Wood all had been mention ed, however. . The new manager came to Portland this year from the De trait Tigers. He was a first string catcher for the Tigers for eight years and previous to that at tended the University cf North Carolina. At present he Is in Washington. D. C, v.'here Turn er said he would ivualn until the opening of the baseball training 6ea30U. DEFEATS PRIMfERS The Nelson and Hunt team In the Club bowling league won three games from the Printers Wednes day night. The Ellis Cubs won two out of three from the Lions, and the Capitol theatre quintet de feated Associated Oil two out of three. Clair Corson of the druggists roMed high individual game, 222, and Lee Johnson of the theatre team made high series, 533. Scores were: KELSON AND HUNT , J.tsH 131 156 185 (arson 123 167 222 JVtirvHi 169 174 178 V.'-Mdraff 168 162 1C7 S1mu 177 160 145 472 512 521 497 482 Totil Pi I'ntoa I 'in III SOB . Hp-on 7f. ft 19 PEINTEE3 133 111 897 2181 118 146 162 169 134 304 477 892 459 456 717 154 133 144 199 97 146 123 Willi Totals ...CT3 741 729 2148 ASSOCIATED OIL Fraiicr 138 J85 189 512 499 453 406 450 2320 - 487 f 533 461 482 450 Kumler 155 141 AVieUert 125 148 1 -ti 135 121 Y'arner 150 150 203 180 150 150 Total 701 743 822 CAPITOL THEATRB II. I!-.-os-n 175 153 154 I... 'olinson lGff 163 . 104 187 187 203 134 150 150 i: H3sett 137 K lll 145 IlcKwao Totals .... I.iiir.tt ISO 811 829 2113 ELKS CUBS 166 204 175 150 145 150 170 790 215 139 156 150 146 545 450 469 450 481 : 150 162 150 137 150 162 150 174 (. j'tIsoii Total Tii". 810 LIONS 119 1G1 , flrore .K-.l.-e Kmikim i'U'sarald 495 416 490 450 471 149 156 150 173 128 178 150 152 rotali rcj 806 232-.: Hug Calls Meet Of Committee of ' Northwest Group George W. Hug, city superin tendent of schools and president of the Northwest association of reenndary and higher schools, Wednesday issued a call tor an executive meeting of the North west association to be held in Se attle October 24, in connection with the Washington education association annual meeting there i October 23. 24 and 25. Besides Mr. Hug, members of the Northwest association execu tive committee include: Dr. Phil lip Soulen, Principal H. M. Hart of Spokane, E. P. Carlton of Portland, Dr. F. E. Bolton of the University of Washington; Edwin Witmeyer, high school inspector st Olympia, and J. A. Reed of Franklin high school, Seattle. Sherwood Man Is Excited Over Salem Statutes "You sure got some bnm laws In your rube town,",wi;ote L. J. Andrews of Sherwood anil! letter to Recorder Mark Ppulsen with which was enclosed a dollar in payment of a fine for parking too near a fire hydrant. Sherwood claimed he was park ed more than ten feet- from the hydrant, and for only about 20 minutes. He said in Portland mo torists were permitted to park six feet from hydrants. "I'll tell people to keep out of Jalem. after this I will any way, the letter concludes. Court Receives Road Agreement The Marion county court Wed nesday received an official copy of its agreement with the United States department of agriculture with respect to the cooperative survey of the North Santiam high WAV route. Under this agreement. the county and the department of agriculture were etch to appro priate $(000 for making the Sur rey. - ' "-. nnvn .tcrs to COMPETE-, Fred Karr and Sam Steinbock, City League Dowiers, wm wmpew tn iMrltl ten rime singles match at the Winter Garden to night at t o'clock-No admission NELSON HIM Looks more like football I wcithcr. rcrzuson, the Willamette half btc".c wLo plowed through the v, ;io'.? Oregon team returning a i-lt'-zoff lat Saturday, says he's y.i-:t beginning to feel at home on tl'.c gridiron strain. He played a couple of years at Monmouth Normal, where the field was al ways muddy. Fellows who never played fuetball won't understand it, bat most grjdders do get a cer tain satisfaction from slopping around in the wet. Once you're wet through and the water is I he fcmiie temperature as your skin, it isn't half as uncomfor table as you might suppose. Ton get to feeling as though you were part of the field, so to speak, and wouldn't feel right any other way. As a mat. ter of fact, the greatest satis faction n football is looking back on Its discomforts. Most players even enjoy their in juries. We've been watching this mat ter of night football under the big lights. It's been tried in the south, and now College of Puget Sound is preparing to play its game with University of Washing ton at the Tacoma stadium on the night of November 2. One detail we haven't been informed about. Are there any lights up in the grandtands? If not, we can see where night football, with the ban on fuss ing left off, would be mighty popular with college couples. Hut it might be detrimental to the organized rooting. Another matter we're going to watch this year is the records of the Ashland and La Grande nor mal school teams. It begins to look like these schools are going to be junior colleges under the official guise of normal schools, athletically speaking, at any rate. If so, they will probably develop into training camps for the uni versity and state college squads. The logical outcome will be that the university gets most of the players developed at Ash. land, and the state college those trained at La Grande. The best of California's great players are coming up to the uni versities from the junior colleges. which are as thick as fleas down there. Take for example Nick Bi can, who played center for Wil lamette, as a freshman three years ago. He was chosen all-North-v west conference center. Then he went to a junior college in Cali fornia for two years, and now is just beginning his football ca reer at the University of Cali fornia. Reports from Berkeley in dicate that he'll be a world beat er, and anybody who watched him here will have no trouble in cred iting those reports. He is now playing tackle. The big advantage is that the Coast Conference re tains its three year rule, so that players who have had two years Two Convicts Hide Out From Prison Guards Evidently In the hope of mak- ting their escape later in the day. two convicts at the Oregon state penitentiary hid in one of the buildings at the flax plant Wed- ! neday forenoon, but were found i after guards, detecting their ab ! ser.ee, had hunted for half an hour. The pair attempting to escape were Jack Barry, burglar sentenc ed from Yamhill county for a five year term, and Dewey Russell, serving a 20 year term for as sault with intent to rob, commit ted in Lane county. BASEBALL CROWDS LARGE LOS ANGELES, Oct. 16. (AP) -The Pacific Coast league base ball clubs attracted a total paid attendance of 1,924,196 during the 1929 season, the third larg est crowd la the history of the league. Harry A. Williams, presi dent of the circuit announced here today. T & On business trips cuways be assured of arriving on rime, and rested tool Relieve yourself of the delayt and responsibility of driving your own car mile after mile over the crowded highways. Sit back in an easy choir ond enjoy yourself, knowing youli be at your destination on time Our frequent schedules enable you to leave and return at your pleasure, r r, PORTLAND TO KLAMATH FALLS AND WAY POINTS Inquire of your local agent for information re garding optional routes and schedules. OREGON STAGES. SYSTEM Hotel Senator, of experience in toogfa competi tion among the junior colleges, will still have three years to compete in fast company; and that beats anything that the Oregon schools, for instance, can provide their freshmen in one year. When the junior colleges first sprang up. it was bemoaned as a development which would ruin football In the big schools. The idea was that players would be there only two years, and would have to start learning the gridir on system of that school their first year of competition. But it doesn't seem to be working out that way. The California schools were in a position to see that It didn't. If the normal schools in Ore gon work out the same way. it wMl be an interesting develop ment They're likely to be something more than training camps for the present, however. Emerson, who played quarter back at Pacific for about four years, is now playing for Oregon Normal. Three year competi tion or four year competition rules don't seem to apply. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Oct. 16. (Special) Oregon and Idaho, after a tem porary two-year lapse in hostili ties, will resume their football encounters in the Multnomah civic stadium at Portland next Satur day. The final game in 1927, like the very fast tilt in 1901, ended in a scoreless tie. The prospect of another tie this yeacis remote. The Vandals, with a fast moving offensive, have run up large scores in their two non conference games this year, while Oreg'on, scoring 58 points against Pacific and seven against the strong Stanford team likewise has a good scoring attack once it, gets under way. The Idaho eleven which met Oregon in 1927 was a heavy ponderous machine with a great defense, but this year, Leo Calland, newly appointed head coach has replaced the style of Charlie Erb wkh a running back field as' opposed to the 'old "im movable line." For years the cry of an Ore gon "jinx" was the annual com plaint of the Idaho team, and from 1901 until 1922 the Vandals were unable to break up the ta boo to win. But since 1922 Ore gon has failed to defeat the north ern team, although two games have ended in scoreless ties. In 1921 the Vandals made their first real threat since the 0 to 0 struggle in 1901. and held Oregon 7 to 7. The following year they won 3 to 0, but in 1923 another scoreless tie was played. The next tw.o years, however, saw Idaho's greatest success against Oregon, and Bob Mathews, then head coach, led the Vandals to a 13 to 0 and then a 6 to 0 victory over the Webfooters. IK FOR IDAHO GAME VcASoiirjky BE ON TIME FOR YOUR APPOINTMENTS Phone Wo" BRITTEN ASK S FORMING Head of House Naval Com mittee Broaches Idea To President WASHINGTON, Oct. (AP) Hopes for the resumption of the annual Army-Navy football class ic were revived somewhat today after Chairman Britten, of the house naval committee, urged President Hoover to Insist that althletie relations between West Point and Annapolis be restored and a game played this year. Brfitten suggested that Secre taries Good and Adams eall the superintendents of the academies together with an impartial author ity on football regulations tit adopt a set of rules on eligibility of players the center of the con troversy tor more than two years. The annual game hereafter would be played according to the rules adapted. To avoid a game this year in the home territory of either insti tution, Britten proposed that a neutral location be used, prefar ably Soldiers' field. Chicago. He named December 6, as a post season date which both teams have open. Britten said the president, who recently expressed the hope the teams would resume their yearly AW HA Never again need eaentiftc research grope in darkened cellar behind doors bolted against torturer AMERICAN INTELLI GENCE has swept before it the ignorant barrier which etapidfy impeded men of genius and science marches proudly on. Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes Progress has been made We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when toe removed harmful corrosive A CRIDS pungent irri tants) from the tobaccos YEARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against all.cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco. properly aged 'TOASTING,' the most modern step removes from LUCKY STRIKE harniful irritants which are pres ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so "TOASTING" LUCKY STRIKE'S extra secret process removes riannful cor rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and . coughing. Thus "TOASTING" has destroyed that ancient preju dice against cigarette smoking by men andt)y women it TUNE IN The Lucky Strike Dance Orchsstn, rsry Saturday tdght, M9,The American Tsbaeee C. tilt, showe'd keen interest in the suggestion. He predicted the game would be played this year at Chi cago, where the famous 21-21 tie in 1926 was fought by the service Institutions before more than 100,000 persons. Secretaries Good and Adams hare discussed bringing Major General W. R. Smith, superin tendent at West Point, and Rear Admiral S. S. Robison, superin tendent at Annapolis, together in the hope that an agreement could he reached. However, they have taken the stand that they would not force the teams to play unless and agreement Suitable, to the cadets and midshipmen be reached. wOODBUlTuMn) PLAY IBOIE WOODBURN. Oct. lfi. fSn cial) The Woodburn eleven will play its first home. game Friday with Independence. -first chance many -jf t'.ic patro.is and stadents of the school havo' had to see the team in action as it was impossible for everyone to go to the West Linn game. Silverton defeated Independence 13 to 0 last Friday and Wood burn intends to increase the score which Silverton made. So far Coach Wolf's team is nndef"-,,-(l bnt it is still early in the season to boast and the tussle with In dependence shows promise of giv ing Woodburn enthusiasts a good, hard game to wintess. No More "Iron Maidens"! A Mi E NT BEEN "toasting and skillfully blended "it's Toasted.' No Throat Irritation Ufrs. IU.ID SALEM CAES PUT OFF Mixup in Dates Causes Post ponement of Tilt With Albany College Athletic authorities at oth Willamette university and Salem high school were burning up the wires Wednesday in search for football competition for this week end when it developed that the games both had been preparing for were "all off." Salem high appeared to be hav ing more success in finding an opponent than Willamette. Pros pects were good that a reserve eleven from Pacific University would be here Saturday to play the red and black, although this will not be settled definitely until sometime today. Salem high was unable to complete its negotia tions for a game against the Co lumbia university freshmen. A tangle in dates, due to the change in coaching personnel at Albany College, caused the post ponement of that school's game with Willamette until November 15 at Albany. It had been sched uled last spring- for Friday, Oc tober 18. As a result. Coach Spec Keene will have an extra week in which to drill his men without the In did it" P REM in cigarette manufacture, -No Cough over a ! network of the N. terruption of a game, for the con test here the following .Friday with the College of Idaho eleven. This will be the local school's first Northwest conference game of the season. Efforts were made to bring some other squad here for a game Friday, bnt ail of them not oth erwise on Willamette's schedule, appeared to be signed up for this week end. DAMAGES SOUGHT BY JOSEPH Bra Claiming that careless driving by operators of two cars involved in an accident some time ago re sulted in injuries which caused him to lose nearly two months of work, Joseph Becker yesterday filed an amended complaint In circuit court against Adolph Hill man, Stewart Springer, and Ro bert Springer. He asks $1465.50 damages. In his complaint Becker, a car penter, alleges that on May 19 h was riding south from Portland on the Pacific highway with Hill man, when they struck the car driven by Robert Springer. The accident was just south of Wood burn, he says. Stewart Springer. Is said to be the owner of the machine driven ; by Robert springer. Read the Classified Ads. eejudic: Manama ivsnmi i i i "Ifs Toasted" the phrase that describes the extra "toasting" process applied in the manu facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos -the Cream of the Crop are sden tifically subjected to penetrating heat at mini mum, 260 maximum, 300, Fahrenheit. The exact, expert regulation of such high tenpera tores removes impurities. More than a slogan, fit's Toasted" is recognired by mfflions as the most modern step in cigaicllc manufacture - - - - ' - ' - V ' " - 1 "S : " ' . v - ----.ir-" : ? : -i . ' : & C STATERS LEAVE FOR PALO ALTO Training for Stanford Game Finished in Heavy Rain At Corvallis CORVALLIS, Ore., Oct. 16. (AP) Completing their training in a heavy rain. 3S members of the Oregon State football squad entrained here tonight for Palo Alto with the cheers ef the stu dent body ringing In their ears and demanding success In their encounted with the mighty Stan ford machine Saturday. The squad, without exception, was In high spirits, determined, If possi ble, to break the steady string of northern defeats at the hands of California's big three. . Coach Paul Schlssler. before departing, announced he probably would start the following lineup in Saturday's game: Striff and McKalip, ends; Byington and Stout, tackles; Cox and Scott, guards; Geddes. center; Buerke. quarter; Kerr and Hughes, halves and Gilmore, captain, fullback. GRAF SEEN OVER YIKKXA VIENNA, Oct. 17. (Thu day) The Graf Zeppelin over this city at 1:05 a. m.,hoifte ward bound to Fried rirhshueiu. risset E OVED ----- L .nw ) - - - charge win be mae. . - -