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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1923)
SPORT q Here. Tlhiere amid Evervwlhiere - DEM TS Raising tfie family F1PJI INDUS Isharrv Willamette Quarter, Is Star Final Score . : Is 36 to ; . ' ' : , ; ; 1 1 1 f ' r - ' : I ioowv webs, im voo (vvrWDwcfA hek SECRET'S c s- Ll n n A ( SfooSe WO THEN nnt' , l V CfcUMB- .OU HD fN,N I I , Glren xne first opportunity of this season to show Its real offen sive . power, Willamette yesterday threw, a well coordinated fighting 'machine into the game and de- xeated the ? Chemawa Indians In their own camp 36 to 0. Brilliant playing by Isham. Bearcat quar ter., featured the game.' For the -first time - In sereral years Willamette has a successful aerlAl attack irnl with tYn rri. tlve 'interference shown yesterday to protect its end runs and line bucks, little apprehension need be felt; for. Bearcat . success during the. remainder of the season. Second String Men Used i llathbun'c men ; held a greater advantage than the - score- indi cates. In 'the last half, which was played with only 10 minute quar ters, practically all of the second string men iwere glren a chance at the workout. , End runs netted the most yard age for the Bearcats, with eriss- rross plays capturing substantial Cains. Tha Indians found the aerial attack the only successful means of gaining and by the use of it were able to seriously endan ger the Bearcat- goal once. The first touchdown came after fire and a half minutes play when Isham received the ball In a criss cross tlay and tore through left end for i 23 yards and a tally. Later In the first quarter "Ish" dropped a field kick for 35 yards and brought the score to 10 to 0. . . Stolzhelse Goes Over Early in the second, period Wil lamette I recovered a Chemawa fumble within the 20 yard line. Booth was given the ball and took It to the four yard line ,' from where Stolzhelse tarried It over the line.1 The sensational-play, of the " game came when Isham re ceived .a punt and ran- 45 yards around! left end for a touch-down, bringing the score to 23 to 0 at the end of the half. ; In the thlrfl quarter Rhodes re covered a tumble by Moore which gained 12 yards for the locals and brought the ball within the 10 yard line. A pass from Isham to Caughlin did the. rest and brought anotner toucnaown wnicu witn a successful drop kick boosted the score another seven points. Wil lamette failed to score again until the last two minutes of the game when Stolzhelse carried the ball for a tally after a lierce battle of four downs within - the ' 10 yard line.': M'- ; ::. ' ' ' . Patton Does Well - -1 Isham was the outstanding star of the game. ; His end runs, his eeaeralsUp and hard fought line easily gave - him that dis tinction. " Patton, Bearcat, end. shares honors .with him for his ef fective interference - and kicking. Wilkenscn, Stolzhelse and Caugh- ! Tixzsfir Co." ; Fart Through Freight to All r VaUey PolaU DaUy. ' 8peed-Efr1clenry-ServIce . Ralem-iortIandWoodhuni , CorvalUs Eugene Jefferson ; Dallas - AlbaityMonjnoiith , ladependenee - Monroe V 8 prlsg Held SHIP BY TRUCK f m -' ' ft-.M . Ve will deliver oar lumber the nune day we receive the order, , Whenever we can't tlo this we will put f on mddltJonal equipment. , ( Hi : ..? ; . . , ni ? I JCT I'M FIGUBK OX YOUB LUMBER . ! CILLALk builders supplies. ' ; . -. ; '5 J.! V. COPELAND YARDS . Formerly West Side Lumber Co. V.eftt BaJem, Ore. . . ; . : -! ' : . . r ' . Baseball Training School , Advocated By J. A. Heydler NEW YORK. Octj 27. (By the Associated Press). - Establish ment of a training school for pro mising young baseball players f row the sand lots and college diamonds was proposed today by John A. Heydler, president of the National league. in a statement declaring he bettered little would be gained by resumption of draft relations between the majors and bir minors. ; President Heydler also declar ed against the excessive ; prices that numerous minor league stars have brought, asserting that the investwents had brought compara tively little return! and pointing out that better results were being obtained by the majors through development of their players from' sand lot and 'college mater ial. A 'training school, be added, with old major leaguers as in structors, would afford - an ideal method of giving preliminary de velopwent to budding stars. World's Greatest Billiard Players Will i Vie Monday NEW YORK, Oct. 27. (By the Associated ; Press.); Six of the world's greatest billiard players tonight put on the finishing touch es of their game in preparation for the 18.2 balkline championship. starting Monday night in Hotel Pennsylvania. ! lin did creditable ' work in the back field. j ? 15 Sheppard starred for the Indian squad, sharing credit with Bieu chert - who did some clever pass ing. -The Indians put up a fierce defense of hard . fighting but were uhable to cope with . jRathbun's squid in strategy or to 'penetrate the Bearcat line which : did the best work of this season. Travel Next Week The next game: for Willamette comes next Saturday when they will travel to Tacoma to meet the College of Puget Bound. On No- vewper 3 they will meet Whitman here in a game which promises to be the most exciting of the year. The lineup for yesterday fol lows: Willamette Logan , . .-. . Hartley. . . . 7 L: - Chemawa . . rel i. George .. rtl Keta . Tgl .Sanderson . . . c ..... .Thomas . Igr ...... .Chuck .- Hr . . . .De Poe, R. . ler . , . Hanson ". . q . . . . .Sheppard . . rhl . . . . De Poe, C . . lnr . . . .Bleuchert . . f .'. . .Grandchamp Oliver.,... Stelncipher. Sherwood . . F"asnacbt. . ', Patton .... Isham I . . . . Caughlin. . . Wilkinson.. StolxheiBe. . Referee, Rusick, OAC; umpire, Fitzgerald. Phone 07O. I - - .' . - -- I I THE MOST DARING OF HER SEX. J flit ?f - . -r. -A- f - I I --:"? - rv t-- Mile. Adrienne BoHand, the daring French aviatrix who looped the loop ninety-eight times in fifty-eight minutes, already had estab lished an enviable reputation for daring. Her friends recall her reputation for endurance under trying circumstances when she made a trip by air across the Andes, the first woman to accomplish this feat and the only one thus far. FOOTBALL BRIEFS MISSOULA. Mont.. Oct. 27. Gonzaga's air attack was too much for Montana university, this af ternoon and the Spokane team won by a count of 25 to 2. For ward passes brought three touch downs for the visitors and an in tercepted forward pass put them in position, for their fourth score. Montana s long count came on a safety after a fumble had depriv ed them of a sure touchdown. : . NOTRE DAME, Oct. 27. (By The Associated Pressi The fight ing Notre Dame eleven, conquer or of Army and Princeton, scored its third . intersectional victory within three weeks today by de feating Georgia Tech 25 to 7 be fore a crowd of 20,000 spectators. The southerners fought a stiff up hill .fight, but fell. before sheer superiority and. a superbly execu ted brand of football. ! TACOMA. Wash., Oct. 27 Fighting hard against overwhelm ing adraatages of weight, reserves and experience the College of Pu get Sound loggers this afternoon were defeated by the University of Washington 24 to 0. i Washington was held scoreless in the first quarter but in the sec ond scored twice, the first time when Captain Wayne Hall recov ered a fumble behind the logger's goal line and the second time on straight football. In the third period Zeil place-kicked from the 25-yard line. A blocked punt on the 15-yard line Was responsible for the . final touchdown in the closing quarter.- ! :? DENVER Colo.. Oct. 27. Playing in a sea of mud. the Uni versity of Colorado won a Rocky Mountain conference game from Denver University here today 21 to 7, Sensational line I plunging by Hartshorn and the aerial work of Captain Art Quintan spelled de feat for the Denrer eleven. ; - STADIUM STANFORD UNI VERSITY, Cal.. Oct. 27. Unlrer sity of Southern California fought its way to a hard earned 14 to 7 victory over 'Stanford university In a Pacific coast football confer ence game, here this afternoon. Holly Adams. USC center, after making' the first score for his team by blocking a punt and re covering the ball "near the' enemy goal, line in the second period, re peated his performance; In the fourth period and won the game for the Trojans. 1 CHICAGO. Oct. 27. (By The Associated Press) Illinois with its Wheat ace, Harold Grange, performing. in : sensational style defeated Northwestern here today by a score of 29 to 0. On only one occasion did the Purple of North western appear to have a chance to score and when the goal line of the Orange loomed before them Grange stepped In. grabbed a for 1 " J "v i 0, ward jass that looked good for a score, dodged, ducked, wriggled and ran his way out of danger and fell behind the goal posts i 90 yards from where he started. The other epic of the afternoon was when Northwestern braced in the shadow of their own goal and held the ball on their one-yard line In the; third period. j CAMBRIDGE. Mass., Oct. 27. For the first time in 16 years and the third time in the history of football, the green of Dartmouth waved in triumph tonight over the crimson of Harvard. A crowd of 52,000 today -saw a powerful Dartmouth eleven crush the un defeated Harvard machine 16 to 0 in the stadium here. NEW YORK, Oct. 27. West Virginia and Penn state, two of the foremost contenders for 1923 eastern gridiron laurels, . battled desperately but indecisively today before a crowd of close to 25,000 at the Yankee stadium. The game ended in a 13-13 tie when Penn state, coming from behind at the close smashed its way to a touch down, only to miss the try j for extra points that offered a path to victory, j . " - - ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 27. Michigan Whipped the . Michigan Aggies today 37 to 0, by a mix ture of line plunges, end runs and forward passes that baffled j the farmers in all but the third per iod. At no other time was it any thing but a triumphant march for the Wolverines, the Aggies though fighting fiercely giving ground steadily, i j NEW HAVEN. Conn., Oct.; 27. with a powerful attack and a strong defense, Yale showed im proved : form in : defeating i the strong Brown eleven today 21 to 0. Two Eli touchdowns were the result' of rushes while the other came when Yale recovered a block ed Brown punt over the goal line. Yale failed to score after these touchdowns j and the other three points were1 made when Stevens scored a drop kick from the 15 yard line on: the final play in the first half. Pond starred for Yale on the offensive making a touch down in the" first and fourth 'per iods. 1 .-"! Our guess? is that the Inventor of -r scopolamine the truth-forcing drug, grew weary of. listening to golf scores. : AIRSHIP LANDS f LAKEHURST. N.-J., Oct. 27. The navy's airship Shenandoah arrived over Lakehufst at 9:30 tonight f romS her flight over the Shenandoah valley of Virginia. - )k v FOOTBALL RESULTS At Eugene final i- Idaho 0; Oregon 0. At Stadium Stanford USC 14 Stanford 7. At Tacoma final - U. of V. 24; College of Puget Sound 0. At Portland final I Califor nia 9; Washington State college 0. Penn State 13 West Virginia 13 (tie.) Yale 21; Brown 0. Pennsylvania 24; Centre 0 Unirersity of Michigan 37; Michigan Aggies 0. j Knox 14; Coe 7. j Army. 73; Lebanon Valley 0. Princeton 3; Nary 3 (tie) Johns Hopkins 9; Haver ford 0. Third Army Corps 14; George town 7. Tufts 6; Middlebury 3. Bates 12; Bowdoin 7- ' . Otterbein 19; Case j7. Rutgers 6; LaFayette 6. (tie) . Detroit University 0; Washing ton and Jefferson 6. Dartmouth 16; Harvard 0. Minnesota 0; Wisconsin 0. Iowa 20; Ohio State 0. y Drake 41; Grinnell 0. Des Moines University v7; Creighton 6. Illinois 29; Northwestern 0. Holy Cross 13; Boston univer sity 0. , - Butler 2; Wabash 0. Vermont 28; New Hampshire 7. . West-Virginia Wesley an 14; Carroll 0. I Springfield 0; Syracuse. 44. Colgate 27; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Mississippi 3; St. Louis Univer sity 28. . Lehigh 14; Muhlenberg. 3. Chicago 20; Purdue 6. South Dakota State 7 ; Univer sity of South Dakota 0. University of Colorado 21; Uni versity of . Denver 7. ! Hobart 7; City College of New York 0. St. Olaf 6; Carleton 0. Gustavus Adolphus 12; Concor dia 0. .. North Dakota University 10; North Dakota Aggies 3.' Hamline' 6; McAlester 0. Nebraska 7; University of Mis souri 1 (tie). , Washington and Lee 12; Vir ginia Poly Institute .0. . Depaw 14; Franklin 7. Rensselaer Poly 27; Stevens 0. Williams 10; Columbia 0. Amherst 7; Berlin 1'4. Ohio Northern 21; Baldwin Wallace 13. 4 ' : Heidelberg 13; Muskingum 21. Ames 54 ; Washington unirer sity 7. j Des Moines Unirersity' 7; Creighton Unirersity 6. University of Utah 15; It rig- OREGON PULP & PAPER CO. I ' .1 - - "' ! i - ' Salem, Oregoa ! MANUFACTURERS Sulphite, and Manila .Wrappings, also Butchers Wrap pings, Adding Machine Paper, Greaseproof, Classine, Drug Bond, Tissue, Screenings and Specialties. Yes, We Deliver Free ' - I ; ;'' , :- . ; - . , i 1 - ".: i - Hay, Grain. ImHry Feed, Flour; Etc. Will be delivered free to any. part of the! city. - r ' ': ' '. s-: . v- :'!.."' : i-':"f Farmers, Warehouse Paul Traglio, Prop. SSO .S. Liberty 8t. ham Young University 0. Hanover 40; Earlham 0. Montana Mines 12; . Montana State 2. j Auburn 34; Fort Benhing 0. Carnegie Tech 7; Pittsburgh 2. LATHAM IS STAR E Vandals Fail to Score on Powerful Lemon Yellow, , Score 0 to 0 EUGENE.- Ore... Oct. 27. The Unirersity of Idaho eleren, al though outplayed most of the game, succeeded in holding the faster Oregon team ; to a nothing to nothing score on Hayward field here this afternoon. Both teams resorted' tof aerial attacks. Oregon making a good share of her yardage In this way. Oregon made ' two nearly suc cessful, heart-breaking - attempts to put the ball over and each time reached the fbne yard line, once near the close of the second per iod, and again in the third. Each time the ball was lost on downs. The Lemon-Yellow squad also reached the Idaho eight-yard line in the first, but were held there. The Vandals. - threatened In the fourth .when;: they reached . Ore gon's five-yard line, but here Ter jeson thred Davis for a seven-yard loss, and an , Idaho penalty brought the ball back out of the danger cone; For Oregon, i the entire back- field performed In great style, with Chapman, ; Latham and Sax sharing - equal : honors for best work. Terjeson also hit hard and fought savagely the whole game. Stivers, Vandal quarterback, was the outstanding star for the visit ors. He played brilliantly through out the game, and he handled his team with machine-like precision. The lineup: -Idaho (0) Position Oregon (0) Vesser . ; " . . Hausen R. Stephens J Kline. . .. . J Tappen . . Quinn. ...i j Nelson, .J. - . Stivers .... Fitzke. . . . . Kinnison . . i Kief f ner . . . i le ...... . Mautz It ... .Vpnder Ahe MS c . rg . rt re . qb . rhb . fb lhb . . . .Bailey ...Sinclair Shields .Reed Williamson . .Chapman .......Sax . . . Latham . .Terjeson Correct this sentence: "I Ijke this suit. John," considered the wife, "but I'm afraid it's a Utile too expensive.; V - if Phone 28. II OREGON GAM SURVEY PLAN STILL UNKNOWN IN AMERICA 1 continued from page I.) live to the conference suggestion. He said: . V - :: ;. j "Such a conference should - be advisory: not Tor the purpose of binding governments who would naturally be unwilling to pledge their acceptance In advance but to assure appropriate recommenda tions by a thoroughly informed and impartial body intent -upon tha anlntlnn nf the difficult vend ing problems on their merits." j-. - American Legion Not To Have Team in League Only seven teams will be entered in the Commercial basketball league this season, the American Legion having decided to f with draw from the league on -account of a lack of suitable, material. Practically every man who play ed with' the Legion quintet last year is affiliated with one of the' seven other 1 teams this season. Under- present plans the Legion will wait until the close of the Commercial league series on De cember 20 and then place a team in the field. , . . j Efforts will be made to sched ule games with other Legion post teams in the district." there being We're Not Much in making promises, but; we do say this about our, tailoring, that if it isnt satisfac tory, if it doesn't fit, if it isn't fully up to your highest expectations -don't take it. It's ours. " D. H MOSHER 474 Court St. ' ' r. FOOTBALL U of Washington v.. O. AC. Bell Field . 1 . .-: - f . - . . . Corvallis Nov! 3, 1923 2:30 p. m. SEATS ON SALE AT HATJSER BROS. STOEE Box Scats $3.00 Grandstand Reserve, $20 and $2.00 General Admission $1.50 plenty of material available fater on. In addition,, games may oe slated 1 with some, of the local teams. - ' ;' Special gas stations for jitney driTers. Now if Henry will only establish special streets for them. If you have any color scheme you wish your car painted con sult US we are ready and able to follow your wishes or help you out with suggestions based on years of' experience in COACH and. AUTO PAINTING. .Adequate facilities and years of experience warrant satisfac tory results. ; RELIANCE AUTO PAINTING CO. 219 State, Corner Front Phone 037 Phone 360. ! ! I J I ! X I!