Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1917)
11 FRANKLIN' CRUSHES HILL ELEVEN 46-0 ilHtUillllutiiHlUimifnii f " l 7 ' 1 W II i 111 I I I I II I M 1 Pi Hazelwood Candies In Attractive Packages The Ideal Gift for any occasion. Winning Team Plays Brilliant' ly at Times, but Slumps Part of Contest. CADETS FIGHT GRITTILY THE MORNING OREG OXI AN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER C, 1917. r7 i&Ljr ' , , JUL' B . yd? ' . i v i r . t iriiiri is . asr m st BSsmaasjBBv jii ' ' 1 ' ' 1 1 I '7z!L.j mra. f Defeated Aggregation Shows Line Which Is Improved Ortr Former Clash Day Makes Long Run and Almost Score. lnteracholastle Lean, Standing,. Vcnllln iTIvli 1 O lOOrt Columbia University 1 O 1W? Jefferson Hl-h J lima Wa.shlntan HlrU 1 0 10O0 Lincoln High 1 .SOO B.nson Polytechnic o 1 .000 High School of Commerce O 2 .Ooo TTiii mir.rv Apjilnmv .......... O 2 .000 Jams, John Hi-h 0' 0 .000 Franklin High School football -team defeated the Hill Military Academy eleven yesterday on the Multnomah gridiron by a score of 49 to 0. The week's series opened and closed -with the same score, Washington having de feated Benson. 46 to . last Tuesday. The game was marked by spurts of fine playing and stretches of limp, life less work. Franklin did not play the frame it is capable of -until after Hill had kept them scoreless through the entire third quarter. This seemed to revive them, and for the final cfuarter they played the same dashing, invinci ble game by which they defeated the High School of Commerce in the open ing battle last week. 64 to 0. When the referee blew his final whistle at the close of the quarter. Franklin had four touchdowns and two goal kicks to Its credit more than had been scored In all the rest of the game. Hill's Line Is Strong. Hill showed a much improved line. Horton, new left end, made a number of good tackles, and featured with his place-kicking. The new lad saved the day several times for Hill, as time after time, with tremendous spurts, he brought down Franklin men attempt ing end runs around his territory that would otherwise have been successful. At the start of the game Franklin went down the field twice for touch downs, Barbur and Brown carrying the ball over. In the next quarter, after Tucker had scored a touchdown. Franklin slowed down, and Day, Hill's fullback, getting the ball on a fumble, broke away from the entire Franklin team and ran down the field for what looked like a touchdown. On the five yard line, however, Thompson, cleverly dodging Hill's interference, tackled Day and brought him down before he could cross the line. Before the next play could be started time was up for the half and Hill lost its chance to try to plow the Franklin line for the remain ing five yards. Over-confidence on the part of Franklin's backfield is what let Day get away In the first place. HUl Fish fa Placidly Badley was the big star of the game. He scored two touchdowns, and did his best to ward off the sleepy spells that beset his team at times. Thompson and Brown als played all-star football, both - getting touchdowns and making yardage. Haines, Churchill. Day and Horton took high honors for the Mili tary boys. Churchill is like "Pudge" Brown, a small, lithe, quick player who would be a valuable asset to any team. What confidence can do for a new team was demonstrated by the fact that Hill, encouraged by Day's 65-yard sprint, held the powerful Frankllnltes scoreless for an entire quarter. The summary: Franklin. Hill. Haizlip C Hartman Thomas RGL Austin JlcCormlck I,C.R Green Gtllls RTL Nile. Prier !,TR Johnson Foulsen RKL Horton Puka L K R Bali Brown Q Churchill Tucker R H L Young Thompson LHR (Capt). Haines Barbur (Capt.) F ray Score by quarter, T-ranklin 13 T 0 26 Hill o 0 o o 0 Touchdowns First quarter. Barbur, Brown: second quarter. Tucker; third quar ter, none; final quarter, Badley 2, Tucker. Thompson. Ooal kicks First quarter. Brown; second quarter. Brown; third quarter, aone; final quarter. Brown 2. Tim, of quirteri 32 minute,. Penalties First quarter. Franklin none. Hill five yards: second quarter. Franklin 23 yards. Hill 15 yards; third quarter. Franklin five yards. Hill none; final quarter. Franklin cone. Hill none. Substitutions First quarter. Franklin, none; Hill, Packard for Austin. Second Quarter. Franklin. Stearns for Thomas' Hill. none Third quarter. Franklin, Pickering; , ju ir-cn, Dttumi tor xucKer; Mill none. Final Quarter. Franklin. Tucker fnp Plk.p. Ins. Daniels for Stearns; Hill. Packard for Hartitun, Mis, for Austin, Daughtrey for Officials Referee. Arthur Stubling. TTm-r-ri. Georae Bertz. Head ltnmn Tui Naugle. Stlckmen. Alfred Burklund for Hill and Q. Stelsal for Franklin, Timers. K. C. Briers for Hill and B. Kinne for HOSPITAL ELEVEN- IS STKOXG Vancouver Team Will Meet Multno mah Club Today. Manager Tsiles, of the Field Hospital football team, from Vancouver Bar racks, will have a formidable lineup against the Multnomah Club football equal tomorrow, when thes teams clash In the first Saturday afternoon game on Multnomah Field. It will be the initial contest for the cardinal and white aggregation and will enable Manager Bertz to get a line on the club's chances against the Uni versity of Oregon eleven, which will be met October 13. Manager Kites has a number of high school stars in his squad and the team averages about 1B5 pounds. Peterson, a former Seattle-High School star, will bo at center: Cook and Merrlman, guards: Kellog. formerly of O. A. C, and Merrlman. tackles: Carr and Kilts, ends; Leslie, quarter: Niles and Barker, halves: Mast, full: Hodson, Ainsworth. Stowe, Oaudet, Coles and Carlin, sub stitutes. Tomorrow the game will start at 2:80. BUZTJKOS HERE AFTER MATCH Welterweight Wrestler Would Go on Mat With O'Connell. Peter Busukos. who lays claim to the welterweight wrestling championship of the world, arrived in the city on the Shasta Limited yesterday from San Francisco. Busukos has been absent from Port lend for a number of years, during which time he has wrestled all through the South with an unbroken string of victories. e wants to meet any wres tler In the world at his weight, Eddie O'Connell preferred, and will post 9600 as a side bet. OREGON CHOCOLATES $1, $2, ?3 and $4 per box HOMEMADE SPECIALS 60c and $1.20 per box MULTNOMAH CHOCOLATES 60c and $1.20 per box MT. HOOD CHOCOLATES 25c to $2.50 per box HAZELWOOD HONEY TAFFIES 60c per pound Sent anywhere by Parcel Post or Express. Satisfaction and delivery guaranteed or money refunded. The Hazelwood 388 Washington St. Broadway Hazelwood 127 Broadway 126 Park St. STARS IN LINE-UP Multnomah and Field Hospital Teams to Clash. FOOTBALL GAME ON TODAY Golfer Oulmet Enters Army. BROOKLIXE, Mass., Oct. 5. Francis Ouimet. Western amateur golf cham plon, left here today with the Brook- line draft contingent for the National cantonment at Camp Devins. Proceeds of Multnomah Field Affray to Go Into Soldiers' Mess Fund. Teams to Trot on to Grid Iron at 2:30 Sharp. Football fans will get their first taste of first-class football this -after noon at 2:30 o'clock at Multnomah Field when the Multnomah Amateur Athletic Club and the Vancouver Field Hospital elevens lock horns for the supremacy of the local gridiron. All soldiers in uniform will be ad mitted to the game for 25 cents, while the admission to the general public will be 60 cents. The money made by the soldiers will be turned into the ath letic and mess fund of the company and the boys in khaki are expected to bring a strong bunch of rooters to Portland from the barracks. The soldiers are being coached by Captain Bradley, a former West Point football star. The squad has several college stars in its lineup. Kellogg, ex- Oregon Agricultural College and all star Northwest man in 112, "Spike" Leslie and Mast, two members of the University of Oregon freshman cham pions and "Shorty" Niles. brother of the famous "Tubby" Niles, former Whitman fullback, are now playing for Uncle Sam. Captain Bradley may be seen at center for the soldiers, as the regular center has been injured and will be unable to play. The personnel of the winged "M" squad is still an uncertainty, but it is the hope of Manager Bertz to use all his men during, the game. Oscar Dris kell, former Lincoln High School cen ter, will hold down the same position for the red and white. O. J. Hosford and W. A. Ramsay will start as guards and Roland Kerns and Wesley Behar rell will relieve them later in the game. Elmer Leader, ex-University of Washington star, Tom Louttit. L. C Dressier and F. Lawrence will play guard during the fray. Johnny Murphy, ex-Columbia University player, and Andrew Feichtinger will start at ends, with Fred Eastlund. Dwight Williams and E. A. Nunn for relief. Eugene Murphy and Eddie Humphrey will call signals at quarter. Erroll Brlggs, last year with the University of Washing ton freshmen; Al Horton, Henry Jones, Eddie Duffy, W. Cummings and M. R. Hempy will raise the dust in the backfield. Arthur Stubllng, present Inter- scholastic League referee, will act in that capacity at today's game. "Ad miral" George Dewey, former "Aggie' star and present Franklin Htgn fechooi coach, will umpire. George Kaugle will hold the marker and boss the cnain- gang. The game will start promptly at s:ju, and should Drove a hummer, as both teams have been practicing faithfully for several weeks. MABEL GREEN-, 17, SWIMS FAR Alameda Girl Breaks Record for Crossing San Francisco Bay. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 4. Miss Mabel Green, a 17-year-old Alameda girl, to day broke the record for swimming across San Francisco Bay, established by Miss Nell Sohmidt, of Alameda, in 1912. Miss Green negotiated the dis tance of approximately three and one half miles between the Alameda mole and the Wells-Fargo dock here in 2 hours 88 minutes and 2 seconds. Miss Schmidt's time over the same course was 3 hours 6 minutes and 10 seconds. De Mar Wins Brockton Marathon. BROCKTON. Mass., Oct. 6. Clarence De Mar, of Boston, won the annual Brockton marathon today. Viliar Kyronen, of the Millrose Athletic Club, New Tork. was second, and Carl W A. Linder, of Quincy, third. De Mar's time for the 25 miles was 2 hours 24 minutes 4 1-5 seconds, a record for the event. PIXKMAN WILL BOX MITCHIE Bout Is Scheduled to Take Place Here October 2 6. Joe Flanagan, manager of the Co lumbia Athletic Club, who will stage a smoker on October 26, yesterday re ceived a signed contract from Eddie Plnkman, Northwest lightweight box ing champion, who is now serving his country as a member of the Washing ton Coast Artillery at Fort Worden. Wash. Plnkman agrees to box Peter Mitchte six rounds. If Mitchie wins over TrambltUB Oc tober 16, the Plnkman-Mitchle bout ought to draw one of the largest crowds that ever attended a local box ing smoker. Plnkman is popular in Portland and Mitchie will have his first opportunity to box for the lightweight title. GAME LAW CONSTRUED PHEASANTS MAT BE SHOT ONLY IN OCTOBER IS RULING. i rlf!lw - Here s a tip on win- er corarort, men CANDY DM IS HERE Taste for Sweets Will Be Free ly Indulged Today. UGAR IS IMPORTANT FOOD Attorney-General Straightens Ont Two Statutes Which Arc Directly In Conflict. SALEM, Or.. Oct. 3. (Special.) At torney-General Brown today for the first time passed on the mixup in the game laws coming out of the last Leg islature as they apply to Game District No. 1, or Western Oregon. He held that chapter 297 of the General Laws for this year is the law of the state. Under this act China pheasants may be killed from October 1 to October 31, except in Jackson County, where the open season is from October 1 to October 10; there is a bag limit of five f such birds in any one day or 10 during any seven consecutive days, pro viding that no female Chinese pheasant be killed at any time. There shall be no open season on pheasants in Jose phine, Coos and Curry counties. The deer season, under tbe ruling or the Attorney-General, extends only to October 15, with a bag limit of two during any one Season. Two game laws of the last session were directly in conflict and both were filed with the Secretary of State on the same day. The opinion handed out today Is not Intended to apply to Game District No. 2, which is provided for in chapter 416 of the laws of 1917 and which previ ously was passed upon in an opinion. STAROST WIXS IX 2:2 0 TROT 2 : 1 4 Pace at Lane County Fair Is Captured by Indian Hal. EUGENE. Or.. Oct. 4. (Special.) Race results at the Lane County Fair today were as follows: 2:20 trot, purse $300 Compete 4 4 2 Rose Kins S 3 4 Btaroat 1 8 1 Sons Sparrow 2 1 3 Time, 2:20. 2:20. 2:14 pace, purse (300 Indian Hal 1 1 T. K. McOresor 2 4 4 ViA Rilev 4 3 1 Hult!mer 3 2 3 Time. 2:13. 2:18, 2:12. Halt mile dash Howard Mann, 1; King and Ocean Bill. Time. o:54. TEN MILLION IS CORPORAL Promotion Follows Company's Vic tory on Baseball Field. SEATTLE, Wash.. Oct. 6. (Special.) Ten Million, of Seattle, who was at one time a member of the Seattle Base ball Club and later went to the big leagues, is now a corporal in Company H. 361st regiment. He received his promotion last Monday, the day after he had aided Company H trim the head quarters team In a game of baseball, 10 to 9. Million's promotion further shows that the man with athletio training has a distinct advantage over his fellows In the great war game. Phone your want ads to The Orego- nian. Main 7070, A 60D&. Millions of Packages This Year to Be Sent to Army Camps, Where Confections Are Always In Demand. All good little boys and girls and many of the bigger ones as well, are awaiting today with special in terest. For the day has been set aside as Candy day and will be cele brated In every quarter of the United States. Candy is to be bought and taken home to fathers and mothers and to sons and daughters. It is also to be wrapped in stout packages and sent off to Army cantonments and traininar stations, for among soldiers and sailors. can ay is always in demand. Candy is becoming the " universal delicacy and among the many products which the confectioner's art has brought forth, there are a dozen de lights and surprises, for every taste. With the improvement of sanitary methods and the perfection of formulae for preparing the best confections, there is no reason for denying the universal craving for sweets. The exhibits in the confectioners' windows now Include sweet things fabricated in infinite variety of form and color.. Combined with the delight or sweetness and flavor, there are novelties of tint and outline which never cease to please the eye. Just recall the few sugared hearts and striped sticks that used to appeal to the soul of boyhood and girlhood and compare them with the thousand fairy like dainties that advertise their charms in the window of the high class confectioner. Candy an Important Food. Whether the taste In candles runs to the hard, striped, brittle varieties, to chocolates and caramels or to gum drops, raarchmallows and jelly beans, the basis of the appeal is the same. The physical demand for candy has a legitimate foundation in bodily neces sity. Candy is a food, a pure hydro carbonate, technically speaking, and is more readily convertible into physical energy than any other edible. Try this experiment the next time you go on a long hunting trip, a climb, or a hike. Take several cakes of chocolate with you, some caramels, some lozenges, some mint drops, candy of any preferred and convenient sort. When overcome by fatigue, eat freely of this provision and after 15 minutes set out again. The candy will already be found effective, for it replenishes the exhausted energy of the body like coal does a battleship. "The Chocolate Soldier" was not al together silly because he filled his knapsack with chocolates. Soldiers in several armies are rationed regularly on chocolate. Sammy on the march haS learned to insert small packages of sweets into his pack. Some have even been found with cakes of chocolate in their cartridge pockets. They know how to obtain relief by eating candy when exhausted by a hard day's march. Svreeta, Displace Liquor. People who acquire a taste for candy are usually indifferent to alcoholic drinks. The chemical structure of sugar, strangely enough, is almost the same as that of alcohol and a formula could be given for resolving sugar into water and alcohol. It has been noticed that- in sections where liquor has been abolished candy sales have increased, People have learned to substitute a beneficial food for one that had only resulted In harm. Eat candy and claim exemption from alcoholic indulgence! Candy for children has always been. provided by wise parents. Physicians advise candy for all normal, healthy children, but caution parents against candy of poor quality. Candy for the children should only be purchased from reputable concerns, for only well made i candy is free from questionable in S. U. S. Preferred that's itl Spelled out, it means Superior Union Suits the biggest pay er of comfort dividends on the "market" today, it's the Active Man's under wear the free and easy union suit that gives freedom of muscle and ease of mind. For Superior can't gap in the seat can't bind in the crotch gives durable wear where the wear is hardest either in the famous buttonless Look for the 'tore that displays this sign : 7 THE ptR UNIP SUIT seat locked crotch or button seat closed crotch and the quality is always the same. The merchant who displays the Superior Service Store Sign below is a good man to know. He'll treat you white and fit you right the Superior Com fort Way, by TAPE MEASURE, not by "guess measure!" Take the tip go see him today. Send for Superior's Official Union Suit Guide for 1917-18. The Superior Underwear Co., Piqua, Ohio. - r THE PERFECT UNION SUIT gradients. Candymakers have united in the perfection of their processes and no large maker has survived except by employing the highest degree of clean liness and the finest quality of ma terials. Buy from the makers who can be depended upon. Candy of standard grade is easy to obtain now. Every store has packages put up by a dozen makers, dealers at the most obscure crossroads being as well supplied as the city merchant in the fundamentals of a candy business. His goods, if they are wrapped in the familiar packages of high-class makers, are always trustworthy. Gift Always Appreciated. Candy In gift packages Is always appropriate and whether the donor be husband, friend, or lover, his message, if accompanied by a box of bon bons. ca.nnot possibly miscarry. The problem of selecting flowers is sometimes diffi cult, but the selection of candles can be left to the young lady behind the candy counter with the utmost secur ity to the bashful young man. The adored one who lives at a distance can be easily touched and moved to re- n ..!.-.-. ; wv av. tat 1..' - AinalH.rat. supply of chocolates. They will be wrapped careruliy and Knowingly oy the lady at the candy counter and de livered with discretion by the post man. There is no danger of sentiments going amiss when expressed- in this fashion. Portland is becoming noted for its makers of fine candy, for a number of confectioners are daily filling orders for shipment of goods to many distant points. Several makers have special ties which stand in high repute. While formerly it was not unusual for peo ple of fastidious tastes or eccentric fancies in candies to order Imported brands, fine candies of every variety are now proourable at any of the leading confectionery stores. Grand Master Visits Dufur. mTKTTR. Or., Oct. B. fSpeclnl.) niuiniiniiiiiiiMuiiiii!!iiiiiiiiii!ininiiMii!iiiiiiii)iiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BUY A BOX CANDY DAY SATURDAY raicess ftocotafeC RussellSGilbeHCo- JWj 50, 1.00, 1.50 For sale at principal dealers. RUSSELL & GILBERT CO. Portland George W. Trlfern. of Ashland, grand master of the Independent Order of Oddfellows of Oregon, paid an official visitation to Ridgely Lodge, of Dufur. last evening. The initiatory degree was conferred by Ridgely Lodge and refreshments were served. Germany to Restore Merchant Fleet. AMSTERDAM. Oct. 5. A Berlin dis patch says the Reichstag has adopted a bill for restoration of the German merchant fleet. The bill provides for a state subsidy to shipowners for re construction of merchant vessels. J?ilIIllIIIIIIIlIllllII!IIllllllIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIllllIIlllIlIIIIltEllIIIlllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIItEllIItfa A Good Day to Observe IS TODAY, Saturday, Oc tober 6 the one day CANDY reigns supreme. Incidentally we suggest a vieit to THE. POPU1 SWEET SHOP. 7t MORRISON TRADE-MARK Morrison Street Between Third and Fourth