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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1913)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPORTING AND MARKET REPORTS SECTION TWO Pages 1 to Is VOL. XXXII PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MOfeNING. NOVEMBER 23, 1913. NO. e are m o.inniov $5000 a month rent is too much. Our building is out of date tis true. But you are not buying buildings. Our Furniture is up to date. WE pay no rent. Think what that means to you. Remember this we owe no money,, we buy strictly for cash, saving big discounts and these discounts don't go to bank ers, they go to you in savings on your purchases. That's, why Gadsbys' sell for less than their competitors. This is the store for the plain people, no frills, no fuss, no trading stamps, no premiums, but bottom prices to all. Liberal credit. $12.50 Velour Couch 7.S5 Excellent Gouch, upholstered in velour, over first-class springs. Has roll edge. Regular values $12.50. : . .$7.85 This Solid Oak Rocker, Speci'l $4.55 Solid Oak Roeker,. like cut, made of 'fine se lected . oak with large, broad arms and back, finished fumed oak or the pretty golden oak; this is a $7 rocker, priced special for this . week .......$r4.5S Princess Dresser Special'y Priced Princess Dresser in quarter - sawed oak or mahogany, polished or dull finish, worth $28. Special this week, at .......... .$17.50 Other Princess Dressers as low as . . ..$12.50 Iff $16.00 ns.oo $12.00 $10.00 $9.00 $6.00 $5.00 $4.00 . $3.00 Have Sale Sample Heating Stoves This Heater has duplex grates and ' cast-iron linings. For wood and coal Coal or Wood Heaters now.... S13.00 Coal or Wood Heaters now $12.00 Coal or Wood Heaters now. .., S9.00 Coal or Wood Heaters now S58.50 Coal of Wood Heaters now ST.50 Coal or Wood Heaters now $4.75 Coal or Wood Heaters now . S4.0O Wood Heaters now J&3.00 Wood Heaters now $2.50 ALL HEATERS SET UP FREE. a New Heater Added to Your Account. We'll Gladly Install It For You Right Now. Some Special Bargains in FINE Bagdad Wiltana, size 9x12. .$29.50 Herati Axminsters, 9x12 $25.00 Saxony Axminsters, 9x12. . .$18.50 Metropolitan Brussels, 9x12, $18.00 Firth Brussels, size 9x12 $15.00 Beattie Velvet, size 9x12 $15.00 Tapestry Brussels, size 9x12 $12.50 Tyvan Art Rugs, size 9x12: .$10.80 Ingrain Rugs, size 9x12. . ...$ 7.20 (Smaller or Larger Rugs .Proportionately Priced) THE LARGEST STOCK OP LARGE SIZE (11.3x15) RUGS IN THE CITY. "Did you read that?" ' "Do you believe it?" "Down here at First and Washing ton." "Why don't we move up town?" "We cannot pay $5000 rent per month that's why." ' ' . Ladies' Dressing Tables We Have a Great Variety of Pretty DreMins X a b 1 e n All Reduced for Tola Week's Sale. .$25.00 Dressin g Tables, birdseye maple, at... $12.50 $18.00 Dressing Tables, . oak and mahogany, at"$9.00 $15.()0 Dressing Tables, oak and mahogany, at $7.50 Cook Stove for Just the stove for a ' small home where a range is too expen sive or-too large to co.nsider at- the pres ent time. Does per feet baking and has a good-sized oven and a full-sized fire bpx. An economical user of fuel. Gads bys' special. SS.50 BUY A NEW DINING TABLE FOR THANKSGIVING $12.00 Extension Table at only .$9.00 $16.00 Extension Table at only $12.50 $18.00 Extension Table at only ...... $15.00 $25.00 Extension Table at only . . $20.00 $33.00 Extension Table at only $27.50 $45.00 Extension Table at only $35.00 Gadsbys' All-Cotton Layer do QC Felt Mattress, Like Cut, for PO. VD $8.50 t m Vii Massive Colonial Rocker $10.50 tit- T ' la. Framework of well seasoned solid oak, best eteel-spring con struction, uphol stered in brown Spanish leatherette. A spacious, comfort able rocker and a most extraordinary value. Specially priced for this week's selling at only $10.50. This picture shows exactly the way our Cotton Felt Mat tresses are made. The contents are pure, clean, sanitary cotton, arranged in - layers and then pressed firmly to gether and sewed and tufted as shown. It is buoyant and elastic as an air cushion and will never pack or get lumpy. The best ticking goes in the covering, and warranted fast colors. Our price for this week only $S.9S Three-Piece Parlor Suit $25.00 This Paxlor Suit comes in three different designs, with mahogan ized birch frames, and is uphol stered in 'high-grade velour. It is the kind of furniture that graces any home. Nowhere but here would you. see it quoted at so low a price. One of the rea sons why we're busy nowadays. Extra value at .$25.00 No Matter What You Want in Furniture Use Our Exchange Department If you have furniture that doesn't suit want something more up-to-date and better, phone us and we'll send a competent man to see it and arrange to take it a part payment on the kind you want the Gadsby land. "We'll make you a liberal allowance for your goods and we'll sell you new furniture at low prices. The new furniture will be promptly delivered. Have furniture you'll be proud of. . HARVARD VICTOR IS OVER YALE 15 TO 5 Crimson Team Makes History by Defeating Eli Twice in Succession. SUCCESS DUE TO COACHING Machine Work of Winning Team Far Superior to Opponents' Kicking Responsible for All Scoring. Brlckley in Stellar Role. and kicking- in this and preceding games, virtually assured himself of the captaincy of the 1914 eleven. That Harvard really defeated Yale by a score of 15 to 3 is conceded by the adherents of both elevens tonight, for the safety so scored by O'Brien was a two-point gift to the Blue, due to a misunderstanding of the rules. The play came in the first period. Immediately following Brickley's first field goal from Yale's 38-yard line, Guernsey kicked off from his own 4 yard line in accordance with the rules. It was a long drive and the ball hit the Harvard goal, posts about five feet from the ground, bounding back to Harvard's five-yard line. Had the ball remained there it would have gone to Harvard and been put In play in the usual way. Instead, O'Brien, to make doubly sure of what he considered a touchback, picked it up while the Yale players were still yards away and car ried It back across his own line. He touched it down, ths committing a safety play, according to the ruling of Referee Langford. Ftw Tempera Unified. This was the only error of judgment noticeable in a hard-fought, clean game. There were few exhibitions of temper, and these did not pass the pen alty point. Lineup and summary: CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Nov. 22. The Harvard football team of 1913. with Charles E. Brlckley, fullback, playing in the stellar role, established a new epoch in Crimson gridiron history to day by defeating Yale 15 to 5. Harvard won through better teamwork and bet ter coaching and through Brlckley' wonderful playing. Nelthe.r team suc ceeded in carrying the ball across the other's goal line, and all the points were the direct or Indirect results of kicking. Seven times Brlckley drove the ball spinning and turning over the heads of the Yale players, and five times the oval crossed the goal bar for Crimson points. Four times Guernsey. Yale s field goal kicker, essayed the same feat, but he succeeded only once. To the Elis' earned three points, there were "added an unearned two, due to an unintentional safety by Left End O'Brien, of Harvard. Thus Harvard defeated Yale for the second time in two years and won undisputed right to the Eastern col legiate football championship of the year. Spectacular as -was Brickley's play. the superior machine that Coach Haughton developed this Autumn earned equal glory with the famous dropkicker. By concerted play and ef forts, the team paved the way for Brlckley - to score the 15 points that stand tonight as Harvard's .record against the Blue. , Yale Team Kails to Hold. That Guernsey, on the other hand, failed to approach Brickley's feat was due almost entirely to the fact that the team in front of him could not hold or drive back the Crimson to a point where field-goal kicking passed from the improbable to the possible. This was not accounted for by any great physical or playing superiority of the Harvard men as individuals, but rather by the coaching methods and system of attack and defense. Stated broadly. Harvard played a well-balanced game in both offense and defense, in which the best an.l most conservative parts of the new and old football were successfully combined. Opposed to this was a Yale game that undoubtedly would have won un der the "i ive-vards-ln-three-downs " days, but was unsuited to win against the Harvard eleven of 1913. The vie tory of the Crimson therefore was as much a victory for the Harvard coach ing system as It was for the Crimson players. That It was a Harvard victory in every sense of the word, devoid of flukes or unquestionable features, is proved by the statistics of the play in. Harvard in all gained 229 -yards and nine first downs in 57 rushes, against Yale's 145 yards and six first downs 41 rushes. Mahan gained 1 1 yards In 16. punts, to 52 yards In the combined 13 punts by Guernsey and Knowles, Brlckley kicked five goals out of seven tries to Guernsey's one goal In four tries. Harvard players ran back Yale punts 133 yards, against 54 yards thus regained by the Eli backs. In penalties Yale lost 30 yards for holdln and rough tackling to Harvard's five yards for offside play. More than 47,000 alumni, undergrad uates and adherents of the two univer sities were gathered frbm all parts of the country. The weather was perfect. Traditions were upset in several ways. The victory was the first scored by tho Crimson over the Blue' in the stadium since it was built In 1903, and the first victory over Yale at Cambridge since 1901. Captain Storer earned the dis tinctlon of being the first Harvard cap tain to be graduated from the univer sity after four years of play without seeing or participating In a Harvard defeat by Yale. Brlckley. by his remarkable playincr Harvard fl.-.l. O'Brien LE Hitchcock L.T'. Gilman LG Trumliull C Ptnnock 11 G Storer RT llardwlck UK Logan QB (Bradlee . . . HI K Urickley HUB Jianan 'H. Yale (.".. Avery . .. Ta.-jott . . Ketchani . . Martins Pendleton Warren . . . . Carter Wilson . AInsworth . .. Knowlei Guernsey Referee W. S. l.angford. Trinity. Umpire rseil hnow, Michigan. Head linesman David L. Kuitz, Brown. Time of quarters 15 minutes. Harvard scorinR Goals from field. Brick ley 4. Goals from placement. Brickley 1. Yale scorine Goal from field, Guernsey. Safety. O'Brien, of Harvard. Carlisle Indians 35 Syracuse 27. SYRACUSE. X. Y., Xov. 22. True Carlisle Indians defeated Syracuse to day in the Archbold Stadium 35 to 27. rhe arae was one of the most spectac ular seen here. During the first three minutes of play, Castle, the Orange halfback, broke away from the Indians on an end run and gained CO yards for the first touchdown. By straight rushing two touchdowns were scored for Carlisle in the first quarter. Garlow kicked both goals. Halfback Bracklin also accounted for two of the Indiana' touchdowns later In the game. GROSS WANTS RETURN JEW YORKER THINKS HE MIOirT BEAT RITCHIE IX XEW TRIAL, 'Broken It lb Worries Me and Took Some of the KtKbt Out of Me," Snym Den tist, Vanquished liy Champ. NiiW YORK, Nor. 22. (Special.) Nothing would suit Leach Cross better tljan a. return meeting with Champion Willie Ritchie over the 20-round route. Considering his great showing against the Californlair- New York's leading lightweight is strong in the belief that he can turn the tables on the title holder In a longer scrap. "I am glad to- note that everyone who witnessed the fight was pleased with my showing," said Cross last night. "I wag in grand shape, but wor riment about that injured rib prevent ed me froni making even a better show ing. There is no question about that. 'Ritchie Is a real champion, let me tell you. He is clever and can punch. For a scientific boxer he is one of the hardest punches I ever tackled. What more can you expect of a titleholder? Ritchie is a great ring general. "If you notice I fought different than In the last three or. four tights here abouts. In my training I picked up something or other that made mo change my plan of attack. I made uj my mind to keep my hands flying all the time and trust to luck to put over the telling wallop. "Those two knockdowns in the third dazed me considerably. 1 told you be fore the fight. If you remember, that I believed i would be lucky to go the route. Any little thing worries me. And that busted rib took half the tight out of me. This Is no alibi stuff. I was beaten fair and square, and again, if you remember, I was only too glad to admit It after the battle." BOISE DESERTS TRI-STATE AVnlla Walla, Pendleton and Xorth Yakima Plan to Kcmalii. WALLA WALLA. Wash.. Nov. 22. (Special.) Word that Boise has with- . drawn from the Western Tri-State League and is a free agent was re ceived today by Secretary L. M. Brown, of the league. The other towns Walla Walla. North Yakima nnd IV ndlt'ton- plan to remain. SPORT - NEWS POT POURRI Sam Crawford. AHOO SAM" CRAWFOHD, now with the globe-trotting baseball tourists, bids fair to make a record this year in the number of games played. His total or games is approaching 250 and the greatest number played, heretofore was Heine Heitmuller's mark of 225. Crawford passed last Winter in New Orleans In business. There baseball is an all-year pastimo and Crawford played quite a bit. Crawford also took part in more than' 25 games While the Tigers were making their way North last Spring. In the champlon shlp series he played In every game and since league baseball ceased he has played 21 games with the tourists. By the time De cember 31 rolls around it is thought he will have reached the 250 mark. Heitmuller played in about 200 games on the Coast the year he made his long mark. After finishing the season ho went to Japan with a party of balltossers. Cleveland probably will not train at Macon, Ga. The Boston Natlonajs are in the' same neighborhood and the two had trouble over the u,se of the park there. The new quarters have not been decided upon. Dick Hoblitzel, first sacker of the Cincinnati Reds, is a football expert as well as baseball player. He is an assistant coach to the University of Cincinnati. The United Bowling Clubs of New York announce that America will have a strong delegation at tho interna tional tourney of the bowlers In Ber lin" next Summer. The trip will bo the fourth to be made by American bowlers. The last was in 1904. when 20 American bowlers carried off tho honors of the meet. . m m m Raymond Oarcla, a yell leader at a soccer football game in St. Louis, br came so excited In his yelling that he toppled over in a faint and died a few minutes later. Tickets to the annual cla-cli of the Army and Navy to he played oa the rolo Grounds November 2a have all been cleared up. That means another football ticket scandal. From a sandlo.tter to a major league star in less than two year i quite a leap, financially as well as artistical ly, for a young player not able to vote yet. "Little Nemo" Leibold, of the Cleveland Naps, Is the boy who startled the American League. Birmingham has about decided to keep the boy who was at first taken on merely as. the wildest kind-of a chance. Now Leibold stands in a good way to be called another "Willie Keeler" for his work in the gardens. Rube Waddell denies the report that he has tuberculosis. "Merely a auld brought on by wet feet," says Rub;. A dispatch from Hickman. Ky., had him going to Arizona for a cure, but liube denies it. Governor Ferris, of Michigan, has lots of good words for the negro foot- Viall Tiluvn, m akinir u wta. rV 1.. . 1 f on the Michigan Aggie eleven. "George Smith is a mighty tine boy and I am glad he is making good in his studies and on the football team. I will person ally send him a letfer commending him on his work In both fields," says the Governor.