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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1922)
TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1922 JEFFERSO DEFEATS LlNCOLrJ West Siders Are Shut Out in Football Contest. FINAL SCORE" IS 25 TO 0 Except in First' Five Minutes ol Play, Cardinal Line Is Smashed at Will. Portland High School League Standings. W. L. Pet. I W. L. Pet. Jcfferaon. 2 0 1O0O Benson. .. . 0 1 .000 Washton. 1 0 1000 Franklin. . 0 1 .000 Commerce 1 0 1000 Lincoln. . . 0 2 .000 Jan. John. X 1 .500 Jefferson high school smashed the Lincoln line at will on Multnomah field yesterday and won its second game in the Portland high school league, 25 to 0. Except for the first five minutes of play, when the Lin coln line held, Jefferson had no trouble In making yardage. At that, twice In the second quarter Jeffer eon was held for three downs close to Lincoln's goal line. Each time Jefferson was forced to place-kick, Stern .booting the ball between the posts from the 20-yard line for Jef ferson's first scores. The first half ended 6 to 0 in Jefferson's favor. Early in the third quarter Jefffer son again scored. Sterns hit center for five yards after a 30-yard pass, Clark to Stevenson, had brought Jef ferson within striking distance. After a touchdown Jefferson re ceived the kick-off and on the first play Hoogs skirted left end for 27 yards. Stern then hit center for a touchdown. Jefferson finished Its scoring in the fourth quarter. A 20-yard pass, Clark to Stevenson, and a 20-yard run around left end by Clark gave another touchdown. Stern kicked only one goal after touchdown. The lieups: Jefferson (25). Lincoln (0). Stevenson L. E Cochran Johnson . .L. T Hughes Hurlburt L. G Martin Wetzel C Klynn Hammond R- G Slgnut DelJIune R. T Rosenberg Swank R E Templeton Clark Q Chiles Mi-Clung R. H Schmaer Hoogs L. H . Marks Stern P Coe Officials Ted Faulk, referee; A. W. Irvine, umpire; William Smyth, head linesman. Substitutions Lincoln, Lasley for Marks; Singleton for Rosenberg;; Eilers for Sugnet; Houghton . for Templeton; Allen for Martin; Murphy for Cochran; Kruse for Eilers; Marks for Coe. Jeffer son Wa.de for Hurlburt; Bl&zier for Mc Clung; Mivez for Blazier. Dempey Driven by Vast Store of Energy. Champ Train Hnrd find Shown Vitality of Dozen Men. DEMPSEi MOST ENERGETIC OF CHAMPS. W0.AX TUB, Loaded dv- IM' 7 , )CZif& 1 . Towni at , llEi AnOO yjobfJ3oIS. ' r . K&flJRS VMS peas Here-. 5CWN60 trr 77 J, r j. dCHepUUB COLLED FZK. eUE ARTIST EDGRE5T DEPICTS SOME OP JACK'S ACTIVITIES OX RECENT THEATRICAL TRIP. day began training In a gymnasium. That's the kind of a fighter to have! "I never worry about Dempsey's neglecting his work. I tell him what training to do and 1 never have to watch to, see that he does it. I can trust him better than I can trust myself. I know he's always on the job. He never grows tired of work ing and he'll never get out of con dition." (Copyright. 1022 by B11 Syndicate, Inc.) DE PALMA ORDERED TO JAIL Fine of $100 Also Levied for Speeding Through Town. MERCED, Cal., Oct. 19. Ralph De Palma will not have to start serving ten days in ;ail at Chowchilla, Ma dera county, for speeding until De cember 1, a stay of execution having been issued today by Justice of the Peace Cornell of that town this af ternoon. De Palma pleaded that he was un der a $50,000 racing contract, the termi of which demanded his ser vices until Thanksgiving day. The judge released hn on J1000 bond until after the expiration of the contract. FRESNO,. Cal., Oct. 19. Ralph De Palma, noted racing driver, was ar rested Tuesday at Merced, after he is alleged to have driven a car through Chowchila, near Madera, 74 miles an hour. Speed officers tele phoned ahead and the race driver was aprehended at Merced.. He was taken back to Chowchilla, where he entered a plea of guilty. and was sentenced to ten days in the Madera county jail in addition to being fined $100. BY ROBERT EDGREN. COMPARED with Jack Dempsey, all the other aspiring heavy weights in recent years have been slow and sluggish. Some of them have been tremendous big fellows, who looked big and strong enough to take the championship away from Dempsey-'Or' -anyone-else, - but- they lacked the thing that brought Demp sey from the bottom of the class to the championship in a little more than a year. Dempsey is driven at all times by a tremendous tore of energy that makes him unlike any other fighter 1 ever saw. Up In the woods, hunt ing, he was on the jump every min ute of the time. He did more work than any two other men in camp. Yet whenever there was nothing to do,. Dempsey dropped down on a blanket somewhere and took a com plete rest. He has the rare faculty of which Napoleon used to boast. He can, go to sleep in a few seconds whenever he wants to. day or night, so can always be fresh for renewed activities. . Jack Kearn3 gave me an example of Dempsey's tremendous reserve of energy and vitality. On a recent show trip through Canada they played two towns a day, with long jumps between. Starting at Kitchen er in the afternoon they played Toronto at night. Then on suc cessive days, showing in the after noon in one town and jumping to the next by train or auto for a night show, they covered London and Hamilton, Sarnia and Windsor, Moneton and St. Johns, Truro and Halifax, Sherbrook and Quebec, Cornwall and Montreal. Kingston and Ottawa, and then Bangor and Portland, Me. After this, in the states, the jumps were longer. "On all this trip," said Kearns, "Jack was the most active member of the party. We had to jump from place place on trains, showing in the afternoon at one place, rushing for a train connection to show some where else at night, often reaching our destination with only a few min utes to spare, and after the night Bhow jumping on some other train for the next stop. "Sometimes we could get a berth for a cjuple of hours, or a few hours more during a night ride, and some times had to sit up in chair cars. "We had all our baggage to rustle along with us. "Long before we were through with the schedule I was half dead for lack of sleep, but Dempsey was frefh as ever. The other poor fel lows lr. the show would be so weary that they'd Me down to rest and nearly miss the trains, and then Jack would run around and hustle them up, help them pack their bags, and often dash for the station loaded down With twice as much as anyone else was carrying. He thought it was great fun. "And wherever he went he was al ways glad to take on any local heavyweight who wanted to give him a rally. At Portland, Me., he boxed a heavyweight who beat Harry Greb, and although the show was outdoors in a heavy rain he thought it was a jokj to get soaked through and slip around on the wet canvas. "At each show he was billed for four rounds, but he often boxed ten. At Wichita, where he was to box four rounds he boxed two with Andy Anderson, two with Larry Williams and two each with three local heavy weight , making 12 rounds in all. "Jack never cared how he traveled from one town" to another. We couldn't make it by train between Bangor and Portland for afternoon and night shows, and they sent us through by auto, at times running 75 miles an hour on those country roads and muddy, too. That was a scream to Jack. But I'll admit I didn't feel any too easy. One skid can kill a champion of the world as easily :.s anyone else! "When we finished the trip I wanted to slrp about a week, but Dempsey was worried because he didn't have enough to do, and next Illinois Drilled for Iowa. CHAMPAIGN. 111., Oct. 19. The Illinois football team underwent a heavy work out tonight in prepara tion for the Iowa battle here Satur day. Coach Zuppke had difficulty with his backfield candidates. "I have a November team," . the -coach said. ' RAIL MERGER DEBATED 2 1 BANKERS ATTEND MEETING IN NEW YORK. Franchise Dicker Tinder Way. CHICAGO, Oct. 19. Negotiations for the sale and transfer of the Sioux City team franchise of the Western league to Lincoln, Neb., are under way, President Tearney an nounced tonight. Football Facts. (Copyright, 1022, Sol. Metzger.) Q. Team A tries for a drop kick. Ball strikes cross bar and bounds back in field of play, striking opponent. Player of team which tried goal recovers it and claims a first down on the spot. What about this one? A. When a kicked ball like this strikes goal posts it is an automatic touchback. Rule e. Section 15. Q. A kicker standing back of his goal line punts a ball and it Strikes a halfback of his team who is behind goal line. Does ball go to opponents on spot, givinj them a touchdown? A. No. It would in field of play, as halfback would .there be offside. But a special rule keeps him onside back of his own goal. A touchdown is scored here if ball is recovered by opponents. It is a safety it recovered by kicker s aide. Hule 6, section 16b. - Q. Is it necessary to, play four quar ters of 15 minutes in every game? A. No. Game may be shortened by mutual agreement of two captains. Failing to do so. it must be 15 minutes long each Quarter. See rule 4, alt sections. Q. May an opponent catch a kick-off before it has gone 10 yards? A. Certainly; the rule covering the kick-off in reference to the ball being kicked 10 yards means that no man of kicker's side recover it before it has gone that distance Rule 20. Q. Team A punted and ball was fumbled. End of Team A accidentally kicked it in his effort to pick it up. What happens? A. Ball goes to other team on spot, whether kick was intentional or not. Rule 20, section 2. (Copyright,- 1922. by Sol Metzger.) Representatives of Great North ern, Northern , Pacific and Burlington Present. NEW YORK, Oct. 19. Repre sentatives of banks identified with railroad interests were present at an informal conference here today of leaders in the movement to merge the Great Northern, Northern Pa cific and Burlington railroads Into one big railroad system. Although no details of the meeting were giv en out, it was learned that only the operating details of the proposed merger were under discussion. A member of a prominent bank ing firm denied that any discus sion hal taken place so far on the financial problems involved in com bining the three big roads. "The merger has been under dis cussion for. many months," ,he said, "but any assertion that the merger plans have been completed is with out foundation. It is not so close at hand as some persons think." Plans for the merger, when com pleted, will be presented to the interstate commerce commission at Washington, November 17. The commission has already announced tentative consolidation plans for the roads involved, but which . do not meet with their approval. Under those plans, the Great Northern would be joined with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad, and the Northern Pacific coupled with the Burlington. The promoters of the proposed three-cornered merger deny that the St. Paul system is in cluded in their considerations. Theodore Merseles of Chicago was elected a. director of the Northern Pacific Railway company at a di rectors' meeting yesterday to fill an existing vacancy. PER M GUILTY MAN WHO CHAINED WOMAN IN CABIN CONVICTED. The Best Play to Use. With the ball in your possession on your own 40-yard line, third down, 1 yard to go. select plays according to the time and score of game. Early in a contest, use a buck here to insure a first down and to prevent your being forced to punt on the next play and lose your advantage. Late in the, game, the play depends upon the score. If behind, attempt a long gaining play, a wide run or a forward pass. If the score is a tie the same tactics should be pursued. If ahead, play as you would in the early stages of the game 7 to gain the' first down by a line plunge. When ahead always keep the ball in your possession as long as possible. Re member that a team on attack is rarely rcored on. A somewhat simple and al most foolish statement this, but a point in football attack too frequently over looked. Of course, if you are well in the lead and have had the ball most of the game, it is always good practice to give the ball to the opposition once or twice in your own territory. If you have any flaws in your defense which need cor recting, the best time to discover them is when you are well in the lead. Too many teams come up to their final big games unscored on and then fall in defeat in these contests because they have failed to test their own defense. Their creed is to keep the ball and run up big scores all season. Selfishness sometimes comes a cropper in football. (Copyright, 1022, by Sol Metzger.) Camp In Good Condition. KELSO, Wash., Oct. 19. (Special.) R. B. Wolcott of Seattl, an officer of the Humane society who was called here on a complaint, regarding the s United Contracting company's camp at the Longvlew townsite. found that camp in excellent condi tion, and that the company is giving its animals good treatment, housing them In first class barns and feeding them well. : Read The Orejonian classified ads. Life Imprisonment Recommended ' for Fred Brown by Jury at Omaha, Neb. , OMAHA, Neb., Oct. 19. A jury in county district court this afternoon found Fred Brown, alleged chain man," guilty of kidnaping with in tent to commit criminal assault and recommended life imprisonment as his penalty. Brown was tried on the charge of kidnaping Mrs. Jean Jenkins. The case grew out of the alleged kidnaping by Brown of both Mrs. Jenkins and Miss Kathryn Mc Maraman on May 27 last and chain ing them in his shack near Benson, an Omaha suburb. The two women, they alleged, were .forced at the point of a gun to accompany Brown to his shack, where he chained them, put them in a hole and at tacked them. Harry E. Boyd was chained with them when he went to the rescue of the two women. Brown at the trial denied that he forced the women to accompany him and alleged they went of their own volition. An exciting 20-day chase over three states followed the alleged kidnaping and Brown was finally shot down by Wyoming officers, 62 miles north of Medicine Bow, Wyo. NEW PRESBYTERIAN C1CHISPMED Edifice Destroyed by Fire to Be Replaced. OLD SITE MAY BE SOLD Central Trustees, Deacons and Elders to Present Plans to Congregation Soon., Definite plans for the erection of a new building to replace the struc ture destroyed by fire on the eve ning of September 23, are under con sideration by the joint boards of trustees, deacons and elders of the Central Presbyterian church. The insurance adjustments on the old structure are being completed and at the next meeting of the officials to be held Monday n'ght it is expect ed that plans for the new building wil be prepared for presentation to the congregation of the church at a meeting to be held Thursday eve ning, October 26, at the Buckman school, r; f Since the destruction of -the church building the meetirigs have been conducted in the Buckman school auditorium and th the East side branch library. Rev. Walter pastor, declared yesterday that every efort would be put forth in -an at- tempt to secure aproval of plane to build a structure this fall. The new. edifice will probably not be erected on the former site at East Thir teenth and Pine street, but it is pre sumed wil be built on-the-lots now owned by the church en the south east corner of East Ankeny and East Thirty-second streets, just on the outskirts of Laurelhurst. Old Site May be Sold. The several lots near the western boundary of Laurelhurst were pur chased several months ago and the church had planned ultimately to build on this site even before its building at East Thirteenth and Pine streets was destroyed. The lot where the old building stod probably will be sold and the funds applied on the proposed new building. Church construction in Sellwood, which has been active during the last few weeks. Is practically com pleted and the Moreland Presbyte rian church, at East Eighteenth and Bybee streets, is expected to be dedicated the latter part of Novem ber while the renovation of the Sellwood Baptist church and , the Sellwood Christian church is . ex pected to be completed within the next 10 days. The new edifice for the Moreland Presbyterians is an at tractive and well built structure and has cost approximately 25,0f0. Dedication Not Set. Members of the Moreland church have been using the Sellwood com munity house for their, regular meetings during the slimmer while the new structure, has been under construction. ...The laying -of 'the cornerstone for the building ' was eliminated and the work has been rushed to get the structure ready for occupancy before the" winter rains begin. The dedication cere mony is the only formal gathering to be held in honor of the new edifice. The date has not been set definitely, although:, jt is probable that Thanksgiving aay may be de cided upon. The Sellwood Baptist church has been undergoing a complete renova tion, both interior and exterior. The building was moved and a full 15 foot basement excavated under the entire structure providing Sunday school classrooms and ample quar ters for the social activities and or ganizations. ;An addition, 30 by 40 feet, has been built and will provide additional capaicty for the audi torium. The entire construction pro gramme represents an expenditure of about $10,000 and the building as it now stands: has a capaicty of about S50 people, nearly three times its original capaicty. The church is located on , the corner of East Eleventh street and Tacnma avenue. Taste Is a matter of tobacco quality We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used " in Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette ac the price. Liggett & Mjtrs Ttbaca C. -J iy CIGARETTES cf Turkish and Domestic tobaccos blended The Sellwood Christian church at 569 Tenino avenue is the third church building in the district to be included in the building activities programme This structure for merly of stucco finish has been re finished outside and will be pro vided with three additional rooms In the Interior to be used as Sunday school class rooms. The work will be completed during the coming wpek. MUSTOE GETS ON BALLOT Walla Walla Candidate Will Run for County Superintendent. WALLA WALLA, Wash., Oct. 19. (Special.) S. C. Mustoe, nominat ed as republican candidate for coun ty superintendent, is was decided today, will have his name on the ballot in the November election though friends of Gilbert C. Wood, democratic candidate, charge that Mustoe has disqualified himself and that they will contest his election if he Is chosen. Auditor Turner yes terday informed Mustoe that the name could tot go on the ballot be cause he had failed to file proof that he had taught one school year of nine months in the county, aB re quired by law, and that the time had elapsed. A telephone message from Attor ney General Thompson this morning stated that the law was directory, not mandatory, and that Mustoe could file his certificate any time before the balots were printed. Mustoe immediately filed. . . " " t Kiwanians Will Plant Trees. THE DALLES, Or., Oct. 19. (Spe cial.) The local Kiwanis club has sponsored a plan to plant shade trees on the Columbia, river high way. Just west of The Dalles, along one of the most barren parts of the famous highway. The club voted to purchase the trees and planting will be under the direction of C. W. Wanzer, division engineer of the highway department. Each mem ber of the club will be held re sponsible for a certain number of trees until they mature. ar -c j o- mn ' I CsSv ' rSh lit fV 'jr MagntTied 22,500 timet MagmRed 22,S00t,me, , ,, J i IV-V&VCJw' 1 Jt the structure of ihe dec . ' the structure of ordjnary ryfi y VSj 5P KS tricaUy treated steel used razor blade. teelueeen I'pjj.L f W' in Cen, Blades is seen fo jWznnffar. HU-N Vjs jt ' ' Qt'i to be in perfect align- unth rough .aw tooth I f T t " Xt j menr-withsmooth flaw. ' edge that cau, smart. r U Y - - less .having edge. ms' S . 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