i SECTION TWO Pages 1 to 16 mum CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING AND SPORTING NEWS n. IT. - f VOL. XXXVII. TOKTLAXD, OREGON, SUNDAY aiOKNING, MARCH 10, 198. NO. lO. mn Gadsbys' Will Give You 52 Weeks to Pay For All the Furniture You Need to Furnish Your Home Completely Come to this Big Furniture Store pick out everything you need to furnish your home completely. Pay us a small sum each week and at the end of the year ice hand you a receipt PAID IN FULL. imiimHtmHimiiiiiiiimtiiiniiHiimimHiHmmiiiimiiHiiiiniiiiimiiiiiiiimiHiHH Sale of Davenetfe Beds & 1 1 tii' Latest Style of GREAT MAJESTIC RANGES have arrived. New trunmetal tops and leg bases. The great Majestic is finest range manu factured. U. S. Government bought ever 8 trainloads of 20 cars each. Railway companies and steamship companies all use Majestic Ranges. Ask the cook who has one. Prices reasonable. Sold on easy terms and guar an teed. 1, $48.50 ffilljliir Silte- $3.00 Cash pjg $2 Weekly 3-Piece Tapestry Suite 5 125 Solid ak frame, best grade Imitation leather covering. Scat and back re mail upholstered. Can easily be converted into bed. Bed springs are guaranteed. We show the largest line of Bed Divans. All styles, all flyisoes. Other styles as cheap as $35.00. . - L vv L- This 3-Piece Suite, consisting of a full-sized Tapestry Upholstered Luxurious Davenport. 6 feet 4 inches long, with loose cushion scats and covered in an excellent grade of tapestry in pleasing colors. Large Arm Chair and Rocker to match. This is the greatest 3-piece outfit ever offered in Oregon. Special at I.. .$I2."5 Bed, Spring and Mattress $19.75 0 Here You Will Find Whittall Rugs In fiive Different Grades in Various Sizes Whittall Anglo-Persian Rugs. 9x 12 size, at SS9.00 Whittall A n a-1 o - I n d lan Ruga. - 9x12 all., at S75.00 Whittall Royal Worcester Rugs. 9x12 size, at 867. OO 9x12 Axminster Rugs 92S.SO !xl2 Velvet Rugs Tor .. JR25.00 Sxl2 Tapestrv Rues at $.5.00 !'xl2 Wool Fiber Hub at Sl-.ftO 9x12 Ingrain at fe tt.OO mm WW 1 c t?fe LI. Heavy 2-inch Continuous Tost Bed, all-steel springs and mattress. Special $10.75 ASK TO SEE OUR NEW AND GUARANTEED . Special Cotton Felt Mattress $12.60 ' Three-Day Special at Gadsbys William and Mary Dining-Room Suite 40-pound Cotton Felt Mattress, (j10 A regular $14 value, special at 5X t.UU GADSBYS' CREDIT TERMS IN PORTLAND AND SUBURBS Illustrated above is one of our many Period Dining-Room Suites we are showing in Jacobean finish. We also have a Tine assortment of Straight-Line Dining-Room Suites priced from $45.00 to $200.00. Sold on easy terms; ask to see them. It's a pleasure to show nice goods that are moderately priced. Exquisite Ivory Finished Bedroom Set $ 30 Worth of Furniture $3.00 Down, $1.00 a Week $ 75 Worth of Furniture $7.50 Down, $1.50 a Week $100 Worth of Furniture $10.00 Down, $2.00 a Week $123 Worth of Furniture $12.50 Down, $2.25 a Week $150 Worth of Furniture $15.00 Down, $2.50 a Week $200 Worth of Furniture $20.00 Down, $3.00 a Week We illustrate one of the many beautiful Bedroom Sets now on our floors. This is a dainty, exquisite set of five pieces, including bed, dresser, chiffonier, dressing table and chair, finished in ivory and decorated in the modern old ivory. Dressing table, $25; bed, $23.40; dresser, $29.50; chiffonier, $29.50. Easy terms on suite or separate pieces. Gadsbys' Special Values in Complete Home & Single -Room Outfits 2- room outfits 5 75 to $100 3- room outfits $100 to $250 4- room outfits $150 to $400 Single Outfits $ 50 to $150 Wm. Gadsby & Sons CORNER SECOND AND MORRISON STREETS Use Our Exchange Dept. If you have furniture that doesn't suit want aorrif thinjc more up to ditto and tetter phone ua and we'll aend a com petent man to it and arrange to take It aa part payment on tho kind you want the Oadsby kind. We'll make you a liberal allowance for your (foods and e 11 ) you new furniture at low prlrea. The new furniture wlli be promptly de livered. Kx change goods can be bought at our warchouae, Klrat and Waahinifton. SPEAS TO MANAGE IN P. C. 11 TACOMA Russ Hall Names Former Portland Outfielder Pilot for 1918 Tigers. PLAYER POPULAR IN WEST Is Kz-Beavcr Played Number of Years on Coast and Had Good Record With Muskegon Club Last Year. Will Report to Tacoma Soon. f ACOMA, Wash.. March 9. (Spe cial.) Outfielder Billy Speas. once of Portland, will manage the Tacoma base ball club this season. That announce ment was made by Russ Hall, owner of the team, today and Speas is expected to report soon. Hall closed with Speas after weeks of dickering witli several former cen tral league players. The final choice Jay between James Hamilton, third baseman and manager last year of the .Muskegon Michigan club in the Cen tral Leayue, and Speas of the same team. But Hamilton wanted too many concessions, fo Hall decided on the former I'ortlander. Speas has spent the greater part of the 12 years be has been in the game here on the Pacific Coast. He is Just over the draft age, having Just turned 32. Kor years he played with Port land in the Coast League and batted around .300 in that circuit. Later he went with the San Francisco Seals. His batting average with Muskegon last year was .296. "lle is now' in Toledo. O. Hall urged Speas in his letter to pick up live ball players back East and send them out. Most of Hall's crew are rookies so far, but he believes he will get Stevens, catcher, back from S n r rancisco. YANKEES TO HAVE CAPTAIN Roger Pecklnpaugh Named to Head , New York Tram This Season. Miller Hugins, the new manager of the New ork Yankees, is a believer in the old order and has, therefore, re stored the position of captain to his team, naming Koger Pecklnpaugh, for mef Portland shortstop, who was leader of the team until Bill Donovan assumed control. Of just how much value a captain is to a baseball team, which makes every move under the direction of a manager who is sitting on the bench or prancing up and down on the coaching lines. It is hard to ray. but Huggins apparently thinks that it is well to have an intermediary between himself and his players, and "Peck" is the man. Announcement of Peckinpaugh's ap pointment came with the news that he had signed his contract for 1918, re ducing by one the number of Yank holdouts. He will report fon active service at Macon with the main body of the team on March 15. SOMMKRS TO MEET FARMER Portlander Is Matched to Go Six Rounds 'With Kapowsin Logger. TACOMA, Wash., March 9. (Spe cial.) Al Sommers, Portland middle weight, and Frank Farmer, Kapowsin logger, were matched today to box six rounds before the Kagles, in Tacoma, on the night of March 21. They will form the main event of the long card. Matchmaker George Shanklin an nounced that the winner of the Farm er-Sommers go will have a chance to meet Mick King at the next Kagles show. Then the scrap will be for the Northwest championship. Sommers has made a good showing since coming to the Sound and his per formance has been liked by the fans. Farmer also is a favorite, as he ap peared here so many times. He is in the finest condition, for when he is not passing swift punches in the ring he is out in Kapowsin helping the United States win the war by juggling spruce. Both men will start actual training at once. arrange one game a week, to be played on Saturday, when all students will be free from war training classes. The majority of Princeton's games will be with universities and colleses in the near vicinity of Princeton, such as Rutgers, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Man hattan and other institutions about New York or Philadelphia. . The pos sibility of the team making its usual Southern trip seems remote. ROWING REGATTA ARRANGED American Association to Hold Meet at Annapolis, Md. One of the most important rowing regattas ever arranged for college crews in the country will be held at Annapolis, Md., this Spring. It will be arranged by the American Rowing As sociation, which has extended invita tions to all of the Eastern colleges to participate. The list includes Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Columbia, Syracuse and Pennsylvania. The regatta has been prompted by words of encouragement from Secre taries Daniels and Baker, General Wood and others, who believe that rowing and other forms of athletics MEET TO BE HELD FRIDAY, APRIL 26 Date of Indoor Military and Open Track Championship Event Is Changed. PORTLAND BOY fl'FIOSK ABIL ITY ii as I. a:dkd him i. RESl'O.XSIBLK POSITION i t J r . v f : t t 1 ."V J - vi J: " Owen M. Snllivan. The youngster who has been handling the athletic affairs of Stanford University in such a capable and efficient manner is none other than Owen M. Sulli van, of Portland, a former Mount Angel College basketball, base ball and boxing star. Young Sullivan graduated from the Mount Annel institution three years ago and entered Stanford, where he immediately became popular with the followers of athletics by his brilliant basket ball playing. Last year he was unanimously elected to the position of mana ger of all athletic activities. Owen Sullivan will be 21 years old next May and is the son of Lawrence Sullivan, of this city. BOARD FLOOR TO BE USED Surfacing of lee Palace Willi Dirt Deemed Too Expensive, Since Object Is to Raise Money for Soldier Athletic Fund. should net be abandoned during the period of the war. As the big inter collegiate races at Poughkeepsie and New London have been canceled, the American Rowing Association has de cided to come forward with the An napolis affair. FACLLTY AM) HIGH SCHOOL, DE FEAT OPPONENTS. ABERDEEN WAR FUND S4000 Cli Mil Contain Enough lo Meet Rctl Cro .;x.Miirot Soon. ABERDEEN. Wash- .Mrch (Sp tial) Aberdeen ha 11 ' In her wr client fund after deducting S2000 paid the T. W. C. A- and by June It is ex pected that the fund wilt contain suf ficient money to meet the next . Red Cross 9nicnt, which will be about Ko.ono for this city. Payment by merchants and manu facturers Into this fund are being promptly made cacn month, and the r- celpts from now on are expected to range between $3000 and 18000 each month and. of course, increasing each month as new names are added to the list of subscribers. Son Severs Father's Arm. WEST rLAINS, Mo, March i. When Mike Stein, a farmer of White Church, this county, was caught In the machin ery of a corn shredder recently, his 18-year-old son took an ax and cut off the father's arm. which could not be pulled from the machine's cogs. The boy feared his father would freeze to death while he went for a doctor. Stein is the father, of ten children. COLLEGE GAMES SCHEDULED Yale, Harvard and Princeton to Play in Three-Cornered Circuit. Dates for the baseball games this season between Princeton, Harvard and Yale have been arranged by the re spective managers. The schedule follows: April 27 Harvard vs. Princeton, at Cambridge. May 4 Yale vs. Princeton, at Prince ton. May 11 Yale vs. Harvard, at Cam bridge. May 18 Yale, 1921, vs. Princeton, 1921. at Princeton; Yale vsrTrinceton, at New Haven. May 2i Harvard vs. Princeton, at Princeton; Harvard, 1921, vs." Prince ton. 1921, at Cambridge. June 1 Harvard vs. Yale at New Haven; Yale, 1921. vs. Harvard, 1921, at New Haven. WORLD'S- RECORD IS EQUALED Princeton AtU-ete Wins 4 5-Yard High Hurdles in Six Seconds. PHILADELPHIA, March 9. A world's record was equaled at the Meadow brook Club Indoor athletic meet here last night, when C. R. Erdman, of Princeton University, won the 45-yard high hurdle handicap from scratch in six seconds flat. The Princeton hurdler had to extend himself to beat Walker Smith and W. J. Cleminshaw, Jr., both of Cornell, who also started from scratch and finished second and third, respectively. v YALE AND HARVARD TO MEET Two Colleges to Play Series of Base ball Games This Season. ' The ' announcement that Yale and Harvard would play a series of base ball games has been received with cheers by the players of both Institu tions. The placing of these games on the schedule will attach an interest and importance to the season that probably woufd otherwise have been lacking with all the undergraduates engaged very actively In military train ing. It is probable that the Tijrers will Snleiu Inntruotors Taken Into Camp by -3-to--0 Score Lebanon Losefi a Hard-Fought Contest, 21 to 10. ALBANY, Or.. March 9. (Special.) Albany won two basketball games Uist night in a double-header contest which marked the close of the basketball sea son in this city. The Albany High School faculty defeated the Salem High School faculty, 23 to 20, and the Albany High School defeated Lebanon High School. 21 to 20. Both games were splendid exhibitions and were close all the way, the score in each of the two games standing 11 to 11 at the end of the first half. The two faculty teams were com posed of old-time stars and while some of the players got a trifle "winded," they put up a good game. This game see-sawed all the way, neither team having much margin at any time. The Salem line-up was Murdock and Ed wards, forwards; Robinson, center; Heater and Lake, guards, with Putman replacing Heater toward the end of the game. The Albany faculty players were Byers and Fox, forwards; Finner ty, center, and Mintou and Moses, guards. In the high school game Albany got a big lead at the start of the hard-fought contest and Lebanon, with a spurt, tied it up Just before the half ended. Ixib- anon then tooK me leaa at me start oi the second half and the winning basket was tossed by Albany in the last min ute of play. The Albany players were Irvine and Fortmiller. forwards; Hen derson, center, and Archibald and Bus sard, guards. Reeves replaced Fort miller in the second half. The Lebanon team consisted of Bottenburg and An drews, forwards; Lysinger. center, and Scott and Tucker, guards. Summers started at forward for Lebanon, but was hurt in the first few minutes of the game and Andrews replaced him. Unfilled Steel Orders Decrease. NEW YORK. March 9. Unfilled or ders of the United States Steel Cor poration on February 2S were 9,288. 453 tons, according to the corporation's monthly statement issued today. This is a decrease of 189,400 tons compared ith the orders on January 31. Board Fails to Get Weaver's Viewpoint. Player's Exemption Plea Falls on Deaf Ears and He's In Class 1. Chairman Lawrence A. Spang lcr, in charge of the arranging of the North west Military and Open Track and Field championships to be held in this city, announces a switch in the date of the big indoor meet to Friday even ing, April 2G. It was orHrinally planned to stage the indoor championships on a Satur day night, tut past experience in handling events of this nature on the last night of the week moved the com mittee to switch to Friday night. While the committee has not yet closed with the -management of he Ice Palace for the rent of the big buildintr. Chairman Spangler expects to be able to make some definite announcement regarding the site of the big meet dur ing the coming week. It has been decided to stase the events on a board floor instead of cov ering the entire surface with dirt. The expenses attached to the latter proposi tion would prove too costly and as the championships are being staged for the expressed purpose of raising money for the various military athletic funds the committee deemed it advisable not to incur too much expense. Jumpers to Be on Mntx. The broad jump and high jump events will be held on mats. It has been decided to cut out the pole vault, discus and javelin events. The military athletes will be kept busy during, the evening because the committee lias about decided to add a few more Army events to include ob stacle races and carrying wounded sol diers. This, with the grenade and bomb-throwing, will keep the soldier athletes in the limelight uuring the progress of the evening's entertain ment. Lieutenant Sheehy, of the Signal Corps cantonment, has been active with Chairman Spangler in arranging the many details connected with the big meet and on account of his past experience in New York track and field meets his assistance has been greatly appreciated by the committee. Committee to .fleet. A meeting will be held by the com mittee during the coming week at the Multnomah Club. Chairman Spangler will announce the appointment of the various committees. It is planned to hold a big drive and dispose of tickets in a manner somewhat similar to the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A. and Knights of Columbus affairs. Dr. A. D. Browne, physical director at Oregon Agricultural College, was a Portland visitor yesterday and ex pressed himself as being a big booster for the coming meet. Dr. Browne is one of the biggest men in athle'tics in the West. He wields a world of power iii National Intercolle giate Athletic Association affairs and he yesterday offered his services to Chairman Spangler to act in any ca pacity Spangler saw fit to place him. Many letters have been received by Chairman Spangler from various col leges and high schools throughout the state inquiring as to the list of events to be staged. The entire programme of . events will be announced later. IDAHO STAR AWARDED LETTEK Wi'.Iiain A. Iiockcl Given "l" He Missed by Minute and Half. UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO, Moscow. March 9. (Special.) Lieutenant Will iam A. Boekel, U. S. R., of the 147th Field Artillery, now stationed at Camp Lewis, a member of the University of Idaho graduating class of 1917, has been awarded a football "I" by the university athletic board. Lieutenant Boekel missed obtaining his letter by a minute and a half in the 1916 season. The board also voted letters in bas ketball to Leslie Moe, of Kellogg: Eugene Hyde, of Boise; Drom Camp bell, of Moscow; Elra Hunter, of Mos cow; Paul Evans, of American Falls, and Ernest K. Llndley, son of Ernest H. Lindley, university president. Hyde and Evans were elected lo board positions made vacant by recent enlistments. HERE'S one for the book. H. E. Weaver, one of Fred Mitchell's rookie pitchers on the Chicago Cubs' roster, has filed a unique claim for de ferred exemption from military service, but the board at Warren, Pa., his home town, placed him at the hed of the bat ting order by indorsing him for class 1. The exemption plea was: "We have a good chance to win the World's se ries." He should have sprung the dandruff gag or chopped off one of his digits. TENNIS TOURNEY PROPOSED Pacific Coast Conference May Stase Big Meet in Portland. SEATTLE, Wash., March 9. (Spe cial.) Coach Claude J. Hunt has writ ten all colleges in the Pacific Coast conference in an attempt to stage a conference tennis tournament in Port land this Spring. The meet would in clude Washington State College, Uni versity of Oregon, Oregon Agricultural College, University of California, Uni versity of Washington and probably Stanford. Coach Hunt believes that this would be the greatest intercollegiate tennis tournament ever held, since most matches are merely between two schools. All of these colleges expect to develop varsity tennis teams In both singles and doubles, so he believes there is no reason why any should not agree to this plan. CAL EWING TO ISSUE STOCK Oakland Baseball Owner Hopes to Popularize Club With Funs. Cal Ewing and his conferees of the Oakland baseball club want to pop ularize the team in their home city. To that end they have secured a permit from State Corporation Commissioner Carnahan to sell 25,000 shares of the capital stock at $2 per share. This is one-third of the capital stock of the club, and the sale price is twice the par value, which Is $1 per share. The proceeds are to reduce the indebtedness and to get ready for the coming sea son. According to Ewing, he is anxious to follow the scheme in Salt Lake, where as many of the fans as possible were made owners of the club. Hen Berry tried the same proposition last ear, but it would not work. I