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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 18, 1914)
SECTION TWO Pages 1 to 16 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPORTING AND MARKET RFPORTS VOL. XXXIII. PORTLAND. OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 18, 1914. NO. 42. I GR EAT ECONOMY SALE FURNITURE AND RUGS This is a sale of vital importance to every person who buys a single piece of furniture this week. Here are hun dreds of pieces of desirable home furnishings at radical, bona fide reductions below our regular rock-bottom prices. Every item here, and scores of others shown throughout our store, bear out our 25 years' record as the greatest value-givers in furniture, rugs and draperies in Portland. Remember always your dollars go farthest here. See us before you purchase home furnishings and let us figure your bilL We'll prove to you that Gadsby sells for less. Rugs Never Sold So Cheap Come and See for Yourself if You Ever Saw Such a Variety to Select From So Reasonably Priced t v Where the Wear Is Hardest Gads by s' Rugs Wear Best $36.00 $27.50 $24.00 $45.00 9x12 Rugs re duced to only. ...... $35.00 9x12 Rugs re duced to only $30.00 9x12 Rugs re duced to only NEW I.IXE OF BEAUTIFUL COLORED RAO RUGS ALL ON SALE THIS WEEK. . $25.00 9x12 Rugs re duced -to . only $20.00 9x12 Rugs re duced to only $15.00 9x12 Rugs re duced to only $20.00 $16,00 $11.85 Gadsbys 3 - Piece Dining -Room Set for..-. We have turned one entire Iloor over to the display of BINIKG-ROOM FURNITURE, where you will be able to find anything- In that line you may desire. It will pay you to see this floor before buying: we can sell you for less. The three pieces above are solid oak, finished either in wax, golden or the popular fumed. Gadsbys' EJ 0 Agent for Majestic Ranges, Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets, Whittall Rugs, Sturgis Go-Carts, Perambulators Gadsbys' 3 -Piece Solid Oak Library Suite, Gen uine Spanish Leather, at This Solid Oak Library Suite, consisting of one Arm Rocker, one Settee and Arm Chair, upholstered in genuine brown Spanish Uather. Spring seats. Quarter- djoe (f sawed oak, dull wax finish. Special for this sale WOiUU Same Suite In Imitation Spanish leather for 8SO.OO. Special Values This Week in Cpmplete Home and Single Room Outfits Two-room Home Outfits 9 40 to 8 75 Three-Room Home Outfits.. 9 60 to S250 Pour-Room Home Outf its...S125 to S400 Single-Room Home Outfits.8 25 to S150 This Comfortable Rocker for $17.50 At thin lrw nrlr. ought to have one of our L a r ge. Comfortable Rockers. They are made of the best leatherette, beautifully up holstered. Now is your chance to get one for $17,50 Sale of Heating Stoves $13 n rrnn iUU 100! I - -'.MA . -1 16.00 Coal or Wood Heaters S 15.00 Coal or wood PI o Heaters 312.00 Wood Heaters CQ for 9 it 310.00 Wood Hresat:$8.50 39.00 Wood $7.50 $6.00 W o o d E2?:$4.75 35.00 Wood $4.00 31.00 Wood Hresat:$3.oo $3.00 Wood Heat ers. All Heater fcet Up Free. Your Old If eater Taken i 1'art Hay- eat on thrPnr ehaae of n ew One. Have a fw Heater Added to Your Arcoant We'll Gladly Inntall It for You Aow. :$2.50 Only 50 $12 A B e a u 1 1 f ul Princess Dresser, made of solid oak, g o 1 den finish, two large roomy d r a w ers, dresser top 88 x 18 inches; French bevel - plate mirror, 18 x 36 Inches a dresser we have never known to sell for less than 118. Our price this week $12.50 jjty 2j33 Regular $25 Buffets for $15 Solid oak, -pretty wax oak or fumed finish. Colonial design. Regu lar price 325. Spe- tfl (J cial for this sale O 1 SJ Special Sale of Iron Beds 1.1 SO Iron Beds sp'l at $4.50 Iron Beds sp'l at $5.00 Iron Beds, sp'l at 37.00 Iron Beds sp'l at $20 Brass Beds sp'l at $23 Brass Beds sp'l at $ 1.95 mtm $ 3.50 lllilH $ 3.75 ffmA f&IS tlifiP $18.00 Our Easy Terms Make It Pos sible for You to Get the Best that is one of many advantages that have made this store popular for the past 25 years. We sell the kind of furniture you really want, and we sell it on such easy terms and at such attractive prices that it becomes a real pleasure to buy and no effort to pay. YALE HUMILIATES NOTRE DAME, 28-0 Old-Fashioned Plunging Waged by Visitors Leads Them to " Defeat. only touchdown of the battle on Stagg Field today. That touchdown w in the first quarter, and for of the game, hardest fought Maroon playgrounds for years, Iowa played Chicago to a standstill. The score was 7 to '0. POOR JUDGMENT RETARDS Losing' Eleven Is Heavier and Its Brilliant Forward Passing Marks Beginning of Game, bat Blues Win Easily. NEW HAVEN, Conn,, Oct. 17. Tale lowered Notre Dame's colors with un expected ease today, 28 to 0. although the visiting eleven was slightly heav ier, well balanced and fast. Its for ward passing was brilliant and effec tive, but this play was discarded at critical moments in favor of old-fashioned line plunging, which the Blue forwards smothered. Errors In Judg ment in electing to rush the ball on the last down instead of punting proved fatal, for Yale held and took quick ad vantage. In the first period, Notre Dame out played Vale, getting 5 first downs to none for the Blue. In the second per iod, after Yale had scored a touchdown, Notre Dame, by spectacular forward passing and a long run by Elchealaub. carried the ball to Yale's three-yard line, when the period was ended. In the last period, with Yale playing many substitutes. Notre Dame s pass lng placed the ball on Yale's five-yard line. A penalty of IS yards for sub stituting the same man twice lost (he visitors anotner chance to score. COLGATE DEFEATED . BY ARMY PITTSBURG DEFEATS CARLISX Winning Streak Continued by Uni versity in Game With Indians. " PITTSBURG. Oct. 17. The University f Pittsburg continued its winning gait today by defeating the Carlisle Indians, to 3. 'Pittsburg made the first score Ith a goal from the field in the first period, and added seven more points 1th a touchdown and a goal kick In the second period. Penalties kept Pitts- urg from scoring In the last half. The Indians made their points with a goal rom the held in the last period. fflXXESOTANS WIN" BY S9 TO 7 or ward Passes and Lone liine Plunges Defeat South Dakota. MINNEAPOLIS. Oct. 17. Spectacular forward passes and long line plunges, backed by a stonewall defense.. helped the university or Mlnesota football eleven today to defeat the University of South Dakota, 29 to 7. All Minne sota scoring was done in the first two quarters. Jajliawkers Run Away With Drake. DES MOINES. Iowa, Oct. 17. Kansas niversity easily defeated Drake Uni- ersity here this afternoon, 32 to 7, in the first Missouri Valley conference game on the local stadium. Game Played on Wet Field at West Point Taken by Cadets, 21 to 7, WEST POINT, N. Y.. Oct. 17. The Army defeated Colgate today by a score of 21 to 7. McEwan, the Army center. got the ball when Warren fumbled pass early in tne first period. With the ball on the two-yard line. Bene diet went through for the score. Colgate came back strong and marched straight down the field to the cadets' five-yard mark, from which point they went over for a score on a pretty forward pass. The Army scored again in the last quarter on a fine exhibition of line- plunging. The cadets' third touchdown came when Mitchell tallied after Butler had caught a fumbled ball on Col gate's 10-yard line. The game was played on a wet field. PRIXCETOX BEATS LAFAYETTE Tigers Force Playing but Linemen Prevent Backs From Getting Away. PRINCETON. N. J.. Oct. 17. Prince ton defeated Lafayette here today 16 to u. xne uigers rorced the play th greater part of the time, but their backs were unable to get away because of the poor work of the linemen. On the defensive, Princeton's forwards put up a SlUDDorn resistance. Law opened the scoring: with a dron- iticK irora. me sj-yara line In the sec ond period, and Bigler followed with a touchdown after intercepting a for ward pass and running 30 yards. The final score came as the result of a forward pass from Law to Brown. which covered 22 yards, and placed the ball on the one-yard line, from where Ames carried It over. Law kicked goal. HARVARD DEFEATS TUFTS TEAM Xew Formation" Is Sprung and Xets Touchdown at Cambridge. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Oct 17. Har vard's crippled team today defeated Tufts. 13 to 6. The visitors showed new variations, not only of the forward pass, but also of the rush. One form tion In which ten men stood five yards behind the line with 1 e quarterback standing over the ball and passing It direct to the rushers, enabled Tufts to march 60 yards down the field for a touchdown. Harvard's scoring was the result of line bucking by Sradlee, the only regu lar member of the Crimson backtield able to Play. AXXAPOLIS LOSES, 13 TO 6 Pennsylvania's 6 0-Yard Run Is Fatal to Midshipmen. PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 17. A fine 60-yard run by Mike Avery, who bad intercepted a forward pass, gave the University of Pennsylvania football team a victrry over the Annapolis mid shipmen on Franklin Field today by a score of 13 to 6. Up to the time Avery placed the ball behind the Navy's goal line the mid shipmen had fought Pennsylvania hard and it looked as -though the contest would go to a 6-6 tie. IIXIXI WALK OVER OHIOAXS Second Conference Game of Season Is Won by Score of 37 to O. CHAMPAIGN, III.. Oct. 17. Illino won its second conference game today by walking over Ohio State 37 to 0. The Illini played old-style football the first quarter, but used a great as sortment of forward passes in the re maining periods. The kicking of Ma comber was a xeature. BAKER OVERWHELMS PRAIRIE Player's Arm Broken in Last Quar ter of 93-to-0 Game. BAKER, Or., Oct. 17. (Special.) Baker High School .swamped the Prairie City eleven today, 93 to 0. The game was curtailed six minutes in the last quarter, when an arm of Ken eth McHaley, of the Prairie City team. was broken. The Baker regulars played only In the first and last quarters, the second tring men playing in the second and third. Five touchdowns and two goals were made in the first quarter. In the last quarter the Bakerltes scored even touchdowns and five goals. The visitors were completely ex hausted in the last quarter. They ought gamely and well, however, con- iderlTig the fact that only last year footbt.ll was introduced in the Prairie schools. Henry Miller, Ralph Miller, Landreth, Langrell and Gardinier starred for the Baker team. Stanford Rugby Fifteen Wins. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal., Oct. 7. The Stanford varsity Rugby fifteen defeated the Titan Club, of Berkeley, 35 to 6. Stanford's freshmen. In the last game today of their schedule, lost to St. Mary's College, 14 "to . La Grande Defeats Union. LA GRANDE. Or., Oct. 17. (Spe cial.) La Grande High School defeated the Union eleven on the local gridiron this afternoon 27 to 0. JHCHIGAX WTV5 OX DROPKICK State University Defeats Aggies, 3 to i 0, in Lansing Game. LANSING. Mlch Oct 17. With si minutes left to play. Larry Splaw drop-kicked a goal from the 20-yard line and the football eleven of th University of Michigan defeated th Michigan Agricultural College team to 0 here this afternoon. CHICAGO WIXS OX IX5XG RUX Quarter Takes Punt and Makes Touchdown, Defeating Iowa, 7-0. CHICAGO. Oct 17. Snatching an Iowa punt on his own 45-yard line, Pete Russell, Chicago's quarter, snaked si OREGON WINS OVER BENDER'S BOYS, 7-0 Washington State College Puts Up Wonderful Fight for Honors Here. STAR FOUND IN BERNARD Nevada Rugby Team Defeated. BERKELEY. CaL. Oct 17. The Unl versity of Nevada Rugby team was do- feated here today by the University of 'California freshmen 8 ta 19. Football Results. New Haven Yale 2S, Notre Dame 0, Princeton Princeton 16, Lafayette 0. Cambridge Harvard 13, Tufts 6. West Point Army 21, Colgate 7. Pittsburg Carlisle 3. University of Pittsburg 10. Philadelphia Pennsylvania 13, Navy 6. Lansing, Mich. Michigan 3. Michi gan A. C 0. Madison Wisconsin 14. Purdue 7. Ithaca Cornell 48, Bucknell 0. Lancaster, pa. Franklin and Mar shall 17, Swarthmore 0. Syracuse, N Y. Syracuse 19, Roch ester 0. Chicago Chicago 7. Iowa 0. Cleveland Mount Union IS. Re serve 0. Hanover, N. H. Dartmouth 42, Ver mont 0. South Bethlehem. Pa. Lehigh 24, Carnegie 20. Washington, Pa. Washington and Jefferson 28, Westminster 0. Des Moines Drake 7, Kansas 33. Minneapolis Minnesota 29, South Dakota 7. , Champaign, 111. Illinois 37, Ohio State 0. Norman, Okla. Oklahoma 13. Mis sourl 0. State College, Pa. Pennsylvania State 30, Ursinus 0. Wllliamstown. Mass. Williams 17, Springfield Training School 13. Exeter. N. rl. rale tresnmen o, rnii- lips Exeter 14. Des Moines Highland Park 7. Grln- nell 0. Bloomington, Ind. Indiana 27, North western 0. Omaha Haskell 38. Creighton 0. Manhattan, Kan. Nebraska 31, Kan sas State Agricultural College 0. Cincinnati Kenyon 0, University of Cincinnati 47. Wooster. O. Oberlin 22. Wooster 3. St Louis Washington O. Rolla 19. Appleton, Wis.--Lawrence 12, Car roll 3. Princeton. N. J. Princeton 16, La fayette 0. Gainesville, Fla. Florida 38, Ivlng 3 College 0. Moscow, Idaho Idano u, Montana u. Denver Denver University 6!, Kear ney. Neb., Normal o. Fort Collins, Colo. Colorado Unl ersity 33, Colorado Aggies 6. Delaware. O. Case 2. W esleyan 0. Richmond, Ind. Butler 7, Earlham C, Crawfordsvllle. Ind. Wabash 34. Rose Poly 6. Decatur. 111. James MUliken 17, Shurtleff 0. Dallas. Tex. Trinity 7. Baylor 0. Louisville Tennessee 65. Louisville 0, St. Mary's Friends' University 60, St Mary's 0. Baton Rouge, La. Mississippi 21, Louisiana 0. Sewanee, Tenn. Sewanee 46, Chat tanooga 3. Birmingham, Ala. Alabama 13, Geor gia Technical 0. Austin. Tex. Tsxas 41. Rice Insti tute of Huston 0. Fayetteville. Ark. Arkansas 34. St Louis 0. Cheyenne. Wyo. Wyoming 0. Colo rado School of Mines 23. Aberdeen. Wash. Aberdeen. 114 Puyallup, 0. Baker. Or. Baker High, 93; Prairie City. 0. Grand Forks. N. D. North Dakota. 79: Jamestown. 0. ' Salt Lake Utah, 7; Colorado College, 16. Eugene Eugene High, 31; Junction City High. IK Norman, Okla. Oklahoma, 13: Mis souri, 0. Astoria, Or. Astoria High. 6; Jeffer Worthy Successor to Fame of Jack I.atourotte Found in Pullman's Quarterback Whose Work Places Him in Class by Self. BT ROSCOE FAWCETT. Referee Oregon-Washington State Game. - In one of the fiercest roughest games in years the University of Ore gon defeated Washington State Col lege yesterday on muddy Multnomah Field, 7 to 0. That's what the score board showed, but. In actual progress and brilliancy of play the Washington Aggies were entitled to a better com parison, at least in the second half. Coach Johnny Bender unveiled and Introduced one of the greatest quar terback finds in Northwest history, when he led upon the gridiron Albert Bernard. 145 pounds, tow-headed and as slippery as a young squib. Time after time Bernard reeled off sizzling runs of from 20 to 30 yards through the entire Oregon team. He was unstoppable. It was sidestep, whirl, turn, tango. maxixe. Castle walk, three-dip Boston, nything to get there, withBemard, and get there he generally managed to do on every punt return. He was the closest to the famous Jack La- tourette that Oregonlans have seen in years. 160O Shiver to See Game. Nearly 1600 spectators braved the rainy, miserable weather to shiver in the stand, and. no matter what allegi ance or creed, the crowd stood and cheered the Pullman whirling dervish to the echo. Oregon started the game with s. rush. and it looked as though the iemon yellow was to have easy sailing. Less than five minutes had been played in the first quarter when the sensational Johnny Parsons shot off the Washington State tackle for an 18-yard dash through a broken field to the Aggies' goal line. Parsons fumbled Just as he was , tackled on the goal line, but recov ered on the three-yard line at the ex treme northwest corner.. On the next play Parsons tore like a'dum-dum bul let through the Aggies' line for a touchdown good for six points. Cor-. nell punted out and Parsons missed. but ' the visitors were offside and Bryant caught the-second, punt Par sons kicked goal. Parsons Sprints 43 Yards. Earlier even than the touchdown Oree-on seemed on the veree of scor ing. Captain Parsons sprinted 42 yards around end on this occasion and would have scored, save for a superb tackle inside the five-yard line. "Tick" Malarkey, the "fighting Irishman," as he is fondly known by Oregon rooters, fumbled the slippery pigskin as a touchdown seemed in evitable and Tackle Applequist of Washington State, recovered the ball. Oregon began resorting to rough tactics soon after xts touchdown. Dave Philbin. 200-pound Oregon tackle, who had been ripping the Aggies' line to shreds, was disqualified for undue roughness almost directly following the score, and this seemed to disorgan ize the entire varsity team. Fools Committed Are Many. Again and again the Oregon boys committed fouls, either offside or hold ing, and distance penalties cost heavily. On Philbln's disqualification Oregon lost an even 49 yards, and later 20 yards when Umpire Stott disqualified Beckett of the varsity, for illegal use of his knees. Altogether Oregon lost nearly 1j0 or 175 yards in penalties. In the second half the Washington Staters came with a rush. Three or four times they rushed the pigskin to within 10 yards of the Oregon goal lino only to be held for downs. Twice they were within the one-yard line, and on one of these plays the visitors claimed they were entitled to a touchdown. Disputed Play Comes Late. This disputed play cropped up In the last six minutes of play. The Aggies had the ball on Oregon s one-yard line on the fourth down. Whatever the play intended, there was a mixup in signals, and. without waiting for ex planations. Quarterback Bernard dove through the line off guard with the ball tightly clutched against nis stom ach. Almost to the second the officials flung themselves into the struggling mass of legs and tangled arms. When the jumble of human angle worms had been unraveled tne ban was round perched up against Cornell a back. three inches shy of the coveted goal. Washington State declared that the ball had been three or four inches over the line at one time, but it did not ap pear so to the officials. Personally speaking, l am positive that it did not reach the line. I was in on top of the play as quickly as possible, and with my hand down under Bernard s breast on tne oaii to prevent Its being pushed back. Orkm'i Klitit Landed. Oregon can claim great credit for the stubbornness of its defensive play In the second half. This do-or-die fighting spirit together with Pull man's ill luck, saved the game for the Eugene hosts. Toward the close Hugo Bezdek, Ore gon's coach, began sending a proces sion of substitutes onto the field, with a corresponding procession of bruised and gnarled veterans going the other way. For Oregon Captain Johnny Parsons was the big luminary, with Anson Cor nell also in the spotlight Parsons suffered a painful cut over his right eye in the first half, but gamely con tinued until almost the end. "BUI" Hay ward stopped the flow of blood by tight bandaging. Tackling; Needs Improvement. Malarkey and Bryant also played desperate ball, and there seemed to be no apparent holes in the line, although its tackling can stand considerable im provement Next to Bernard. Captain Alvord. Tackle Applequist and Tyrer. on end, were "bears." to use the vernacular. The backs also carried themselves bril liantly. Bangs doing most of the ball advancing from scrimmage through his way through a hostile mob for th son High. Portland. 0. (Concluded on Page 2.)