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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1915)
MB SAX EM CAPITAL 30XTCLHAL, WAX EM, OBEOQlf WPPTTEBPAY, MAY 19, 1913. SportNews Manager Turner Signs Up Fast Bunch for Sunday's Game in This City I I ! COAST LEAGUE STANDING L. 18 21 19 247 P.O. ,5!H .523 .,r,ll .415 Vor Hip noxt inin after fire us la.v MnnnuiT John I). TiTiicr has siKin'iI up the Vancouver Timers, ami u re.l but content in promised for next Suiula.v. The TinTn pla.v iiuleppmlent ball around Tortlnnd and dims with the Portland eily league teams. They have already played e'mht or ten games thin year, ami will bring a neasoned nriutiou to Hnlem. Tn SiiiuIu.v'h (jnmo Wehb, n Portland twirler, who in at present em jdoyed in Salem, may work in the box. Webb has been pitching in Portland anil has a good reeord behind him, and in expected to prove a reliable twirler. I(y Keen, the Hnlem hith school heav er, will probably be used on first base in this xnuie, and Captain Ilolmau is Blso considering a few other changes in his lineup. licit, the Kcnutoriul third baseman, in leading the Salem stickers in the two amcs played tins season with an aver W. San Francisco 2(1 Los Angeles 26 Salt Lake 21 lalilund 23 Venice 1 Portland 10 25 Yesterday's Results At Los Angeles Portland Venice game called off on ac count of Manager "Happy " Ho gan 'h death Monday, At Suit Lake No game with San Francisco; rain and wet grounds. At Oakland Oakland, 3; Los Angeles, 1. I All Will Be Hurry and Bustle and Glitter When Great Exhibition Arrives Bell Loads Salom Hittora 1 the best known trap shooters in the val ley, won tlie 100-bird event and the f0 I bird special handicap event at Indepen- dence Sunday. In the S0-bird special event the shooters wore handicapped by added yardage., but in the 100-bird i event they shot from the regulation din j tance. In the main event Siddall and I M, Kickard, the CorvnlUi expert, tied I at !7 birds out of a possible hundred. In the shunt-off Siddall won by break , ing lit out 0 i'20, while Rickard slinttor I ed but 13. Team shoots will bo hold in the near future between the four (dubs, Indepen dence, Salem, Alban y and Corvale, Kneh team will be made up of 10 men and the aggregate score will count. One shoot will be held in each town and the first shout will be held in Indepen dence, on Decoration day. The next shout will be held in this city, but the date has not been set. Willamette Val ley shooters generally are practicing for the Northwest shoot to be held in Port land .1 11 nc 11 7, S and II, and a number of shotgun experts from this city will enter. The score of the 100-bird event at I iiilepeudiMice follows: M. Siddall, !7; M. Hiiknrd, H7; John Palmer, till; Orvil Wilson, !I5; 1(. K. Dc Arniond, !"; .lirn Heid, l2; W. K. Cra ven, MS; W. II. Cockle, 02; Dr. ltogan, 70; Miss (iludvs Iteid, lili; W. U. Alex ander, !I0; ,1. ',, Fenton, Sit; W. Huff, S5; Nat Withers, 77; K. Johnson, 02. Scores of .riOIiiil speciul: Siddall, 40; Allen, 41; Richard, 40; DcAiniond, .'111; Palmer, 4:!; Wilson, 117; Alexander, 12; Johnson, 45; Fenton, 45; t 'raven 41. utre of .555. "I'.ill" Heiuliarl, with two bits out of four it me up, Im ni'cuinu- luted an average of .500. He has work ed in but half of the two games p'.ayed, while Kelt hns work ed in two full games. Humphries places lliinl with I hive hits 011 1 of nine times up. I he team averages follows Hell Kcinhn it Khv . Wet Ilolmau Crnlg .... I'.berhardt ... II. Ave. . H 5 .555 j . 4 2 .500 . n :i .:i:u, . 4 1 .250 .. 4 I .25il .0,2 .222 . (1 I .100 .7 1 .1 15 .. I .125 .. :i 0 .000 .. H 0 .000 . 1 0 .000 Salem Cracks Score in Shoot at Independence Mark Siddall, secretary of the Capi tal City Km! and (Hiu Club, and one of Coast League Honors Memory of "Hap" Hogan I.os Angeles, Cul., May 10. "Hats off!" was the inter at the Pacific Const league games today when every I bull player and every fan in the league dil honor to the memory 11 1' Hap llngnn, Ihe'veteiuu leader of the Venice Tigers, who died of pneumonia, While the casket containing nil that is uiortnl of the dead Hup was being biirue into the crematory in I.os An geles by Itov llitt, "Doe" While, Dick Hnyless, Waller Carlisle, Frank Decaii ' niere ami Juliuuv Kane, members of the Venice team, the games at Sun Fran ,1'isco and Suit I, like were slopped for ' live minutes, every player stood in his pnsilioii, cap nil', head hewed, and the crowds iom and sliml uiicmered. I'sunllv. at the funeral hour, the ill! eressive but He cry of Hup Hogan was hi:i I'd rini'iug over I lie diinmiml, nud the opposing pitcher, especially if he I was a youngster, oPen grew Wild as ! the veteran began Ins couching antics ; buck of I In id base. Hut Hap llogau's voice will never lie heard acain, Ilis ciiiehiu,; stunts are a thing of memory. I And lit the huiir when he used to sallv forth from the pit, ready for a fight, the games slopped, and Ihe crowds Tomorrow the rushing of switch en gines as they clatter here and there in the railroad yards with great strings of gaudy ears. Tomorrow the tugging of gnudy ears. Tomorrow the tugiug of horses and a rush of work for several hundred persons that a city may reap a benefit of happiness. For tomorrow the circus is coming, coming with its great trucking wagons, . its shouting, hard working "ruzorbacks'' and plauk men, its waving banners and flags, its brass throated bands. For tomorrow, out at the showgrounds will rise the great dun colored tents of the "biggest circus in the world, while the workmen hurry here and there in the preparations for the afternoon show and the performers wander about the lot, looking for the landmarks that were memories of their lust visit here. For circus people, you know, must livo by landmarks. Hurrying about the country, rarely remuining any placo more than twenty-four hours, they do not have time to leurn names or streets or localalities, save by the landmarks thereabouts. A grocery store, a bill board, a drug store or a clump of trees all these things have the relative value to a circus follower's sense of locality that the moss on 11 tree has to a woods man. Hut all that is beside Ihe case. The fact is that the circus is coming to town and that before noon tomorrow, while the great parade winds its way through the downtown streets, tin1 big tents of the Sells -Kioto Circus and Huffulo Hill's Irigiuul Wild West will be ready and waiting for the crowds it will invite. And, incidentally, there are plenty of attractions this year to bring those crowds, even beyond Ihe fnct that the price of the circus remains the same as ever, a general admission of twenty five cents, including a seat . There will be Kosa Rosalind, fur instance, a "find" on the part of Ihe Sells-Kioto Circus, and a rider so 'wonderful that she agrees by her conduct to forfeit her day's salary if she does not perforin without fuult eipiestrienne feats that seem utmost impossible. There are the forty clowns, too; Marguerite and Cap tain Dutch Hecurdo, who train lions and tigers and leopards with nothing nioro than a tencent buggy whip; Luciu Zora and her three herds of performing elo phanls, including Snyder, tho biggest "tusker" iu the world; Devlin's Zou aves, lihoda ltoyal and his accompany ing troupe of horses; to sny nothing of tile Hyueys, the "flock" of monkeys, the acrobats and aerialists and the big uieuagei'ie. Ami, of course, there's Huffulo Hill, Ihe original and only Huffulo Hill, with his troupe of genuine cowboys and cow gills, the champions of inanv a stam pede and rodeu, wit h the vaipieros nud ludiiius and his Old Demi wood stage coach, and all the other things that go to ninke up the features of his wild west entertainment, which he is to present and to supervise personally. And just as a sort of display of all the features of the show a sample of everything is to be shown in Ihe parade which will fume nt I0:.l0 0 clock to morrow illuming. It is to traverse the principal downtown streets, nud for the diguilv of it, it wilt be led bv Col. William Frederick Cudy (Huffulo Hill) himself. Also, according to its custom, the circus will hold aa uptown reserved seat sale all day tomorrow, It will be at Put ton ltros. Hook Store, w here re served nud general admission seals may he iilitniited ut the same prices as haiged nt the ticket wagon on the grounds. yOUR first chew of "PIPER" lays the foundation for lasting content, and the more you chew "PIPER" the moie solidly you build for a life time of tobacco satisfaction. To know the real joy that lurks in tobacco to get the supreme juicy richness out of chewing, chew Hoidsiocl Cwio Tnbct Cbipiot FUvtr Added to the good taste of the ripe, rich leaf of "PIPER" is the zest of its de licious "Champrtcrne . Flavor." There you have - j.. 11. 11...H ... a aouoie sausiucuon in your chew. FREE Sand 10c and your tobacco dealer' nam. and we'll neit.l a full-tlte 10c cut of "l'IPKK"andahnd aomi leather pouch t'KKE, anywher lit 0, S. The tobacco, pouch ud mulling will cost ui 10c which w will gladly ipeni beclua a trial will tniik you teiJy uwr ut "PIPKH." THE TOBACCO COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA Sm Fraathr, Cat J lot litl-limUil, loll. wrapped, to prrv h."PtPtH"llw. , stood baielieiiiled III reinenibniiice of him. There was no game in I.os Angeles. Members ol' the Venice nud Portland clubs intended the I'll net 11 1 , which was conducted at Christ chinch by the Itcv. Maker P. l.ee. livery club in the league was represented ut the funeral. Tom Stepln ns, vice president iif the San Francisco club, represented that organ i.c'ion. For n immlh the Venice Tigers will wetir crepe bunds on their nuns, mill flags in nil Pucific Coast league nan piit'Ks will I ly al hull must. Ex-Beaver Captain to Get Try-out in Majors Portland, Die., May III. President Mei'redic, of the Portland Coast league leaiu, to.lnv 1 nut' unied a report ihitt Hill Kodgeis hud purchased his release. Kudgcri, niter four years willt the Heavers at second base, slutted with the Cleveland Americans this venr, but failed tn stick 11 ml reverted tn Portland. Uudgers wited President McCredie asking pcrtiiisinii to piirehase his free dom us he had 11 11 opportunity to sign with another major league team, and it wits granted after Malinger McCredie ga e his consent. "Hill worked hard for Portland dur ing the past four eiirs itnd he deserves Ihe chance," suid President McCredil. When a fellow's wife has a girl I'liilld Ihllt the MiinU lili,, l.t t...t.,t I,., doesn't leek forwaid to the intrulitc lion, lie knows Unit the girl has been here n lung, long time. wwiii 111mm a. 4 in 1 iiiria atffii 1 1' . J I. Knoll S)i tN, Ili aoN VLi in. Arrow COLLARS f for t:'t Clurtt, t'v4llr a ., tui. M.ktra : Maxwell ': Wins Test Over 40 Cars BIHOnEHI KaMBHflBUu Result of the great Yale University Sheffield Scientific School Test Of the forty automobiles tested at the famous Sheffield Scientific Scho i laboratory the Maxwell stands first in economy of Gasoline consumption Ml CHANIOAL (NO.INCCKINa OCPAftTMKNK, Hirrtuo SOKMTirio ohoou ait wxivcaaiTt Nat hkvih, eoNNieneuT Hay lit 1915 0 Th Blerr Uotor Car Comp&n. 1079 Chapel Strett Kw Haron, Conn 0ntlanni- I am enolotlns report of Utt of your ltaorell automoblla recently euit In our laboratory. I should Ilka to add tho following conmntii 1. EKLUBILITT OP TEST. A prolialnary taet raa nado on April 19th, ualng a new oar whioh was wthar tiff. The ahowlng was so good that we deoided to make a aeoond teat This was made on April SOth, ttsing same oar On this test, the oar shoved leee stiffness and the perfornanoe was better than oa the first oar The aeoond test was supervised by our most oareful exports, and the results, ! belioTe to be perfectly reliable. 2. UILEA0S. Tho effiolenoy of the Maxwell automobile as indicated by tho number of miles on a level road is exceptionally high. This mileage reoord Is better than that of any one of forty automobiles tested in our laboratory to date.' 3. UOTOR PERFQ8MAN0S. The effiolenoy of the motor and oarburetor as indicated by the pounds of gas oline used per hour per horae-power at rear tires, Is exceedingly good, and indioates very perfeot oarburetor aotlon over the 9iole range of speod and load. This reoord like that on mileage per gallon, Is the best one that we have had Tory truly yours, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR MECHANICAL ENGINEERING. The table furnished by the Yale Sheffield Scientific School Power and Fuel ie8t made on high gear of Maxwell stock Touring Car on compara tively level roads by Professors E. H. Lockwood and T. Q. Boyer, Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University. 1. Name of car MAXWELL, 1915 Model 2. Owner of car Biever Motor Car Co., New Haven 3. Date of test April 30th, 1915 4. Weight of car with driver 2,000 lbs. 5. Wind rjsisting area 20 sq. ft. 6. Rolling resistance, declutched, high 36 lbs. 7. Rear ratio, direct, measured 3.55 to 1 8. Tires, size, front and rear 30 x 3.5 9. Tires, make, U. S. Non skic Inflated to 70 lbs. 10. Wheel base 103 inches 11. Cylinders Four, 3 5-8x4 1-2 12. Carburetor K. D. 13. Ignition Battery and Simms Magneto 14. Starter Simms-Huff 15. Gasoline spec, grav, 0.72 SPEED Miles per Hour 10.2 19.8 30.1 40. DRAWBAR PULL Pounds 42. 60. . 90. 132. HORSEPOWER At Rear Tires 1.2 3.2 7.2 14.1 FUEL Miles per Gallon 33.8 33.2 23.2 19.3 Come in and see and ride in one of these Record Breaking Maxwell Wonder Cars. Full 5-Passengei Touring Car Electric Starter $55 extra . Call, write or telephone, and we will put one of our demonstrating cars at your disposal. REES & ELGIN Perry and High Streets Rogers Block -'irsn