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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1916)
i-IAJLJ-X fUKiLAni;, WE.JJr4.iSlJAX, UaX JBE.K. II, liD. V VJHniFSnMF:IKF:nF' ,11 IIWhMWWIIIIi WWfca W I LEISURE HOURS THE PfWPDCOO' CIIDICPT -, uunuiiLoo OUUJLUI International Recreation Dele gates Have Successful Meeting at Grand Rapids, TOT MAKES A HIT IN STAGE DEBUT U. S. SUPREME COURT 1 - Wrltlnr from Grand Rapids, Mlch Joseph Lee, president of the Interna tlonal recreation cormrress, which re cently closed a very successful season there, says: "Futyre wars, we hope, will be. fought, not from trenches, but on football fields," said a speaker at tha opening session of this recreation con gress. He described th internation al Irintc, civilizing influences of Amer ican games in China, India, the Phil ippines, Kouth America and among 8,fr00,000 dispirited men In the prison war camps of Europe. We have all beei discussing; athletics, piay and Km as the best means of building character- and efficiency whether for peace or for war. "Any one who thinks of 'play as merely child-like, soft, amusing, un important, would be surprised at the hundreds of powerful, earnest men and - women assembled here, Intent upon tli o irvvl$oratlon of American life through . wholesome use of leisure hours f all the people. Community Centers Emphasised. "Community centers In the publlo schools have been emphasized with their varied activities dramatics, games, civic discussions, music, libra ry centers, dancing, sometimes pool tables, always clubs, classes and seri ous study groups, Milwaukee's wider use of her school buildings la making that city famous for something other than Its bottled products. "Great, yet growing, powers were represented here. One delegate is superintendent of playgrounds, sports and multitudinous recreational activ ities In Chicago's south side parks a life-building plant worth $144,000,000. In truth, the 7500 employed playlead ers of America command large, In creasing forces. Delegates Corns Tiom Afar. "Many delegates came from great distances, at large personal sacrifices of time and money from Dallas, "Winnipeg, San Diego, Providence, and from scores of towns and cities in be tween, with a sprinkling of leaders from other countries, even Uruguay. "Technical discussions characterized this, more than previous congresses. What gurries to play? How to "reach all tho children all the year Kural life, how muite It more attractive? Methods of re-creating Industrial power killed by monotonous tasks. Can politicians be shown that ef ficient playgrounds are good politics? Whence shall adequate public funds be secured? Apparatus, Occidents, laying' out playgrounds, recreation buildings. Upon such themes as these the delegates got down from orations to brass tacks." 4' ' f Wireless Hervice Idle. Nantucket. Mass.. Oct. 11. (U. P.) Evidently all vessels are keeping their wireless closed whilo pane lag this section of the Atlantic highway. 1 R-wl' ; Lionise Marvin. Little Miss Louise Marvin, 6-ycar-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. 13. Mar vin, who live at 944 East Yamhill street, made her Initial appearance on the legitimate stage this week, when she took a role opposite to Romaine Field ing, former "movie" star who is tak ing the lead in "The Heart of a Man" at the Pantages. Most of the time she is In his arms, but her technique in what little part she takes, is remarkable for the tot on her first appearance. In the little time that she has played the part of the little tot rescued from the stage and brought back to father and. mother, who have become recon ciled after long separation, she has endeared herself to Mr. Fielding, who thinks that she has the stage pres ence of a real actress.. Freighter Has Speed In Time of Need Norfolk, Va., Oct. 11. (I. N. S.) Alarmed after picking up wireless warnings of the presence of German submarine off the American coast, the captain of the United Fruit company's freighter and passenger steamer Coro nado raced his vessel Into port so fast that the government observer at the Virginia capes was unable to obtain the name. The Coronado arrived 16 hours ahead of her schedule. Would Standardize Bread. Eugene, Or., Oct. 11. A bill will be Introduced In the legislature at its 1917 session to provide for a standard loaf of bread In this state, according to C. L. Hansen, deputy state sealer of weights and measures, who Is In the city for a few days. Mr. Hansenjjs taking weights of thc loaves of breSd manufactured' in Eu gene, and Is doing the same thing In many ether cltie.s of the valley, to get a line on the proper weight to be pre scribed for a loaf of bread In the bill to be Introduced. The bill will be for mulated by the department of weights and measures and Introduced by some member interested. HEARING ON THE UTAH CAME TO PORTLAND IN THE EARLY DAYS raw CASES T ODAY Government Asserts Power of Disposal of Public Lands Rests Solely 'With Congress TTaahlntrton, Oct. 11. (WAm NO- ION BUREAU OF THE JOURNAL.) 1 he. Utah Power ca3es were up fpr ar gument in the supreme court today. These are the rases in which Attor ney General Brown of Oregon, follow ing instructions of Governor Withy combe, filed the lattefs views and the speeches of Congressmen McArthur and Sinnott, supporting the power com pany's argument. - The government's brief declares that If the power company's views prevail, "It will Loon operate to place every valuable waterpower site on public lards and reervatlons in the owner ship of power corporations, thus de stroying with one blow this Important clement in the plan of conservation." Frank S. Short, California corpora tion attorney, prominent at the Port land water power conference last year, tcok a leading part In the argu ment. He contended that govern ment land may be taken by state au thority or by others undei state au thorization for beneficial use without obtaining a permit from the federal government, because such appropriation is corollary to state disposal of water. The government asserts the sole power of disposal of public lands rests with congress and the attempted sub ordination of the United States to state theory of eminent domain would de stroy essential rights of the govern ment to control its most valuable re sources In the publlo interest. The cases are the most Important ever brought In determining the power of congress to enact water power leg iolatlon. The United "States won the decision In the court below. Invalid Ten Years; Dies at Pendleton Paul X4exla, left Physically Helpless by Paralytlo stroke, Passes Away Daughter la Business at ! Orande. Pendleton, Or., Oct. 11. For 10 years an Invalid In St. Anthony's hos pital here, Paul Lederle dted Tuesday afternoon. He was, formerly a tailor ot this city and La Grande and was left physically helpless by a paralytic stroke 10 years ago. He is survived by a daughter Pauline, who Is In busi ness at La Grande. Beaverton Bam Burns. 'Bcaverton, Or., Oct. 11. The big barn on the A. H. Ellerson farm, about three miles west of here on the Farm ington road, burned to the ground Mon day night. Four horaes, cows, shesp, hay, grain and farm implements went up in smoke. Sparks from a nearby slashing on fire, were responsible. i I i " I ' " a I "5- S V y m i, f - 1 r i A7 ait-' . s 3 II I 8. F. Kerns. Eugene, Or., Oct 10. Samuel Flem ing Kerns, ploneec of 1852, who died I here Sunday, established a home with his bride, back in 1868, on a 20 acre I farm In what is now the Hawthorne , district, Portland. There Mr. Kerns developed one of the first nurseries tn the state. Mr. Kerns was a native of Hills i boro, Highland county, Ohio, and was 1 83 years old. He was a first lieuten ant of Company A, First Oregon volun teers, and served through the Civil war. TRIPLE BY OLSON BEATS BOSTON IN THIRD BIG GAME Former Portlander Is Hero of Game on His Home Field, Q7f ALL-YEAR, Gar An original Kissel Idea carried to perfection in this series. ALL-YEAR Sedan, Coups and Town Tops mounted on HundredPoint Six Touring, Roadster and Victoria bodies. Prices complete, $1320 to 1850. midred Hoiit ON the country roads and mountain highways of Oregon and Washington, the mechanical precision of the Hundred Point Six the concentrated power of its Kissel-built engine its light weight and many structural innovations in sure unusually high efficiency and stability for country touring. It takes the hills and hard roads just as though It was "brought up in the country.' See this car of a Hundred Quality Features. Note its proportions, lines, comforts and re finements. You will vote it distinctly the car worth owning. Place your order now and see Oregon's glorious autumn days in mountain or valley. Touring Car or Roadster, $1095 F. O. B. Factory. Pacific KisselKar Branch Portland Branch, Broadway and Davis St. Y SAN FRANCISCO PASADENA LOS ANGELES SAN DIEGO OAKLAND SEATTLE Jacobus slammed one to the left field bleachers and it looked like a certain homer. Lewis threw to Scott and ha relayed o Thomas at the plate. Frem tne s tanas seemea as lr uaunert was safe by two feet. Hennery thought so too a first and waved for Jaoobus a home run while the crowd went mad with Joy. But the light heartedness was short lived. Even as Hennery signaled that Daubert had accomplished a circuit drive. Thomas, still squatting upon Daubert. howled at the umpire and Hennery then peered underneath Thomas and Daubert and peered long and Intently and then waved out Dau bert, while all the folks registered anger and hatred and lust for the um pire's gore. The only explanations for Hennery's reversal seems to be that Daubert's toe was an Inch or so from the plate at the moment Hennery did his squint ing, although when Daubert first slid,, both his feet crossed the plate or an optical illusion occurred In the press bo. The loss of that run did not have any critical result on the game. If it had, well you know they have pelted umpires with bottles and things like that before and habits cling. The score: S UV.fcvX. EVERY INCH A CAft The score: BOSTON . AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Hooper, rf 4 1 3 1 O 0 JiDTrin, 2b 4 0 0 1 0 0 81orten, cf 4 0 8 0 0 0 Hbfclltsel. lb 4 0 1 12 S 0 Iwi. If 4 0 0 1 1 0 Gardner, 8b 3 1 1 3 1 1 ffcbtt, S 0 O 1 0 Thomu, c S O O S O 0 Mey, P 1 0 0 0 4 0 Hendrlckioa 0 10O00 roster, p 10 0 13 0 ToUl 81 S I m ie 1 BROOKLYN AB. B. H. PO. A. X. M. Myers, ef 8 0 0 8 0 0 Daubert, 16 4 1 8 T 0 0 Htcogcl. rf 8 0 13 10 Wheat. If 1 1 4 O 0 Cctahaw, 21k 4 0 1 4 0 0 Mowrey, 8b S 1 O 3 1 0 I Imd, ca 4 l a i z o Miller, a 3 O 0 4 3 0 Coo tuba, p 8 0 1 0 S O Pfefftr, p 1 0 1 0 1 0 ToUl 80 4 10 t 0 raster 1. Basse e balls Off Coombs 1. Mays 8. 3ree baa alts Olson. Hooper, Daabart. Home runs Gardner. Credit victory te Coombs; cnarf defeat te Ifsys. Barrlflee kits ateatel. MiUer B. Vtyors. Bit by pitched oaji M. Myera. wiu pttcaaa . tester, laa. lots oltcbed By Mays t, mas 4v kits T, at bat 19. By Ooomba, 1-i, mas 8. bits T, st bat 23. umpires O'Day. pUte; uoaaouy, bases; Qnlgley sad Duwea. foul uses. Patients and Nurses Have Narrow Escane r iasaes Oat Three-Btory Xoepltai m Baa Bernsrrlliir) Osrstslsr of BuUd tas; Is Held oa Ann Ohaxfa. San Bernardino, CaL, Oot 11. (P. N. S.) Penned In their rooms by an al leged Incendiary fire that swept the building. 15 patients and several nurses were rescued from death try the police yesterday when flames gutted a three story hospital operated by Dr. Emma Jocelyn. Firemen and police carried the pa tients to safety. They were Immedi ately rushed to other private hospi tals. One of the nurses was carried from the building after being over come by smoke. A few hours after the blase was ex tinguished, William Courts, caretaker of the building, was placed under ar rest on an arson charge. Oil-soaked rags are declared to have been found in nine different rooms, where fires were progressing simultaneously. Dr. Isabel Jocelyn, owner of the hos pital, was arrested on a charge of arson today. Dr. Jooelyn'a arrest fol lowed that of William Courts, a care taker. Both denied any knowledge of the fire. Dr. Jocelyn herself rescued three patients from the building. New Lumber Plant At North Bend Busy - Oonoern Organised to Take Orer Sold. laf 0f mmgiom fcumbe Company, Banning its sQU Steadily. North Bend, Or., Oct 11. The new Bay Park Lumber company at North Bend Is now running steadily. It was organised to lease the old mill of the Simpson Lumber company. The plant has been rebuilt and put in good order. The steamer Hardy has been char tered from the Simpson Estate com pany and has taken the first- cargo from the mill. The company has in stalled a large planer, the biggest of the kind on the ooast, which will used especially, to handle b!g,timseT for ship building. The result of rail transportation he already been felt In a beneficial war by the North Band Mill Lumbea company. c BOBBY" LQJT HI! BIRTHDAY SAN FlUNCISCO HOTjCUS Batted for Maya In sixth. SCORS BX INNINGS. Bontoa 0 0000310 0 8 Ulta 3 0 1 1 0 3 1 0 07 Brooklyn 001 13000 4 Ulta 1 0 8 3 1 1 1 1 10 SUMMARY. , Struck out By Coombs 1. Pfeffer 8. Mays S, HOTEL TK7ABT GAM FRANCISCO Geary Street just ell Union Square European Pun $1 JO a day op fctakfasteO Lunch SOo Dinner 1 1.00 Meet Famous Mails In the United States Sew steel and concrete structure. Canter ef theater, cafe and retail districts. On carllnas transferring all ever city. Take Municipal car line direct te door. Motor Sui meets trains and steamers. By Frank G. Menke. Brooklyn, Oct. 11. (I. N. S.) Billy Carrlgan tried a dangerous experi ment yesterday and one that cost his Red Sox the third game of the world's series. Bill sent Mays to the mound in the hope that his subway delivery would baffle the Dodgers, and the Brooklynltes promptly maced It for four runs and seven hits, which gave them the ball game by a count of 4 to 3. Irving up to their "never say die' reputation, the red hosed warriors from Boston tried gamely, and des perately to overcome the handicap, but they fell one run short. It was a bait game featured by plenty of clean hitting and devoid of any really glaring errors a contest that was won by the Dodgers because they out- batted their rivals and outplayed them. Dodgers JShaks Off Nervousness. And now the series count 1st Red Sox 2, Dodgers 1, with the Dodgers thoroughly recovered from'thelr Initial nervousness, with the clansmen of C. Hercules Ebbets back on earth again and playing the kind of base ball that lifted them to the crest of the National league. It lodked like the Red Sox to win four out oT five at the most after that first miserable exhibition In Boston, with the qualification, "if the Dodgers don't get hold of them selves immediately." But they have made that clutch They are playing now like world series veterans. Daubert Recovers Vision. They have come to realize mat a titular combat is not one whit dif ferent than any other, and they are ; playing it that way. Best of all, from the Brooklyn viewpoint, is the fact that Jacobus Daubert, premier swatsman of the outfit, recovered his batting vision this afternoon, which augurs well for the Dodgers In future games. But the defeat must not reflect upon the Sox. 'They have not -lost their wallop, their fighting spirit or their superb ability. They went down to defeat because their leader put in a pitcher who began to wobble Imme diately and who for some strange reason was allowed to remain long afterward. It was to be seen that the Dodgers had him measured for a severe walloping. If any one individual was In fault in the Sox squad. It was Carrlgan for allowing Mays to linger and still linger. Ivan Olson, shortstopping party for the home gang, was the real hero of the fray from the Brooklyn view point and all others. By his brilliant worh on the defense he stopped sev- j erai assaults of the red hosed gentry I and with his war club he hammered I his associates through to victory. I It was Olson who cinched the game 1 In the fifth Inning with a tremendous ' three base hit to left, which scored two runs the brace that enabled the Dodgers to win. Minus that one clout of Olson's, a different story would be chanted In baseballdom a story that would tell of three straight triumphs for the Red Sox. Coombs Scores Olson. The Dodgers annexed their first tally in the third when Daubert sin gled. Stengel followed with a short single and Cutshaw delivered a blow down the right field foul line which was hefty enough to permit Jacobus to slip across the plate. The second Dodger score was made I in the fourth. Olson started off with a bunt single and promptly was sacri ficed to second by Miller. Then came Jack Coombs with a single to right center that scored Olson. When the Red Sox came to bat In the sixth they were confronted with a 4-0 score. Undaunted, they battled on and they gave the Dodger fans some nervous moments before the final out was made. eardnar Oeti Home Sun. In the sixth Henrikson batted for Mays and was given a pass to first. Hooper followed with a triple that scored Henrikson and a minute or two later Hooper registered on Shdrten'a i single which was, by the way, the tntra straignt nil lor iue uwuiy out fielder of the Box. The Sox scoring ended in the seventh when Gardner lifted one of Coombs' twisters over the right field wall for a homer. That smash ended Jack Coombs. He I bad held the enemy In check early In the fray but in the sixth they began to solve him. When Gardner soaked him for a four baser, Wllbert Robinson halted operations and replaced "Old Jack- with Jeff Pfeffer, who promptly choked off further batting rallies. Hennery O'Day has become vary un popular In Brooklyn and vicinity. It Is all because ha refused to permit Dan First? A WESTERN UNION telegram gets instant attention and brings the first reply 6 WESTERN UNION Service broadens territory at least expense and keeps you ahead in the hot race of competition. THE WESTERN UNION TfUGRAPH Ctt V VEIREADY Offers $3000 for a Name We suggest that you get busy turn one new word into $3000. Get your contest blanks here. Archer and Wiggins SIXTH AND OAK STREETS You prefer rubber beela for their comfort or economy you get both in Spring Steps, with safety as an added feature. That famil iar red ping slip-proofs your stride. You'll also appreciate the absence of cave-like holes that carry mud and dirt. AS sbes gny or Un50 ants xtUchea si Shoe Stores mni Rep Air Shops everywhere. SATK Met Tor the name of your dealer and SOowevtll send you prepaid t packs of Tally-bo quality Playing Cards that would east yra Me elsewhere. "SPWN&STEP -105 Fsdcral Straat Boston Pit il, You Need an EsEREaaar FLASHLIGHT Whether you be housewife or maid, em ployer or employe, if you desire safety you must insist on an Eveready Lamp' Not Merely . because it js a handy little electric lamp to have about the home, not merely be cause it will safeguard you against thff dangers of matches, candles, etc., but because its genuine Tungstetf long service battery and Mazda lamp are a' guarantee of satisfaction. It will pay you to look over our assortment. All styles and types. PRICES 75c UP A Complete Stock of Fresh Batteries Stubbs Electric Co. Sixth at Pine Distributors Never choose a partn smo TOM king a KEENE CIGAR i e 3 . i er wno i x- J? Jl -4! He's more apt to have his mind on that enticing Preaado Blend than on the game. 3DDM KEENE die cigar with that Eresado Blend J. 1L Smith Company, Distributors. Portland, Oregon (THE qOOP UUDQE WAS NOT SURPRlSStx) fHttXO. MAYOR. 1 1 1 THOUQMT YOU AID yr w.too araowat wa.3 uvina too MIHI TAKINSTOO LARE A CMBW now to arrriHa wit 1 , WlaSJ i , 1 J user of W-B CJJT Chewing to a THAT TMI IDtA.. AMAIX CMCW LeK BSTTSA ANO TAVTK ssTTanr h THB tip from t beginner ist M If you won't take a little chew don't ttke any. W-B CUT isn't ordinary tobacco. It's rich tobacco a chew as big as a regular sized wad of plug is too much of a good thing. If you really want to know what tobacc satisfaction is, tack a UttU nibble of W-B into your cheek. and notice bow the good tobacco taste lasts nndsatisfiss.- KU Vy ETKJL3XUTC3 CCZFAXT, U tdm Seaara, tew TA Qtf ' '4. A v 1 . i bert a home run in the sixth stanza