Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1922)
THE ' SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, NO VE3IBER 19, 1923 oralis. SCENES CAUGHT AT CORVALLIS YESTERDAY WHEN OREGON BEAT OREGON AGGIES, 10 TO 0. r "L WILEY B. ALLEN CO. Eight Stores Nearly 50 Years 148 Fifth St, Near Morrison T T ON AGGIE ERRORS I "2 rr- Vn Place Kick and Touchdown Made at Start. TWO-YEAR TIE BROKEN State Football Championship Is Won; Several Fumbles Are Made by Corvallis Men. la (Continued From First Page.) over the crossbar. Oregon 3, Oregon Agricultural college 0. Another Score Made on Break. That score was made exactly five minutes'af ter tne game started, and on the ninth play. The next Oregon score and the last one came In 11 minutes more by the watch, shortly before the end of the quarter. Again It was on a break. The ball had gone back and forth, but the. turn came when Chapman punted 45 yards from past midfield to the Aggie 10-yard line. Garber, evidently under instructions, let it fall to the ground and roll to a stop wihtout attempting to catch it. Instead of kicking immediately, the Aggies elected to try a running attack. Gill fumbled and was thrown for a two-yard loss, an Ore gon man all but getting the ball. Pnnt Made Imperative. They made it imperative for the Aggies to punt, so with the center standing on his eight-yard line. Gill had to stand behind his own goal to kick. He got the pass all right and let drive, but Callison, the tall Ore gon center, had broken through and the kick bounded off his outstretched arms and back behind the line where Spears, Oregon left end, made a fly ing dive and nailed it for a touch flown. Chapman kicked goal from place ment, making the score Oregon 10, Oregon Agricultural college 0. It was the final Oregon score. The Aggies fumbled several times after that, but none of the breaks were as fatal as those first two and the Oregon attack was never strom enough to smash through the stal wart defense of the orange and black linemen. Once, in the last quarter, it looked for a moment as if another break, a blocked punt again, would give Oregon a touch down. Von Der Ahe blocked a kick by Gill on the 20-yard line and Spears who, be in remarked, played one whale of a football game, fell on it on the Aggie 10-yard mark, deeded Punch la Lacking. But Oregon couldn't muster quite enough punch or, to put it another way, the Aggie line was smash proof in the old emergency. King, Chap man and Latham did manage to carry the ball to the two and one-half-yard line on three tries, one of them a six-yard forward pass. But there they ran into an unyielding wall of fighting youths who didn't know what it meant to quit, and got no further. That magnificent last stand held Oregon for downs, and this time Gill punted safely out of danger. He had to kick from behind his own line, too did it after the Aggies had tried a running attack from their 24-yard line and the runner had all but been downed be hind his goal for a safety. Then Gill, standing fully ten yards back, his shoulders almost against the spectators..booted as he hadn't boot ed any other time in the game, a long spiral, followed by a roll that netted 60 yards and sent the battle back into Oreson territory. The Aggtes lost, and they lost to a team that played a better game, but they can write that-fighting fin ish into their memory books and be proud of It. - In the first quarter, a few minutes after the Oregon place kick, King fumbled on the Oregon 39-yard line and Locey of the Aggies recovered, that being almost the only break that went to the Aggies. Two suc cessive offiside plays by an over anxiou. Oregon substitute end gave the Asgies ten yards and . first down on the 29-yard line. Ag-a-le Bucks Lour. But in three smashes the Aggie backs actually lost two yards. So on fourth down Tousey attempted a Ulace kick from the Oregon 44-yard line,'' but it went wide. That with one exception was the nearest the Aggies ever cot to the Oregon goal line. The game was played almost ..ntirely In O. A. C. territory or in midfield. The exception occurred in the second quarter, after Locey's kick had gone wide, when the Ag gies, receiving Chapman's punt, be gan a running attack that took them from midfield to the Oregon 23-yard line, with one Oregon off-side help ing. In eight smashes. Two succes sive first downs were made by Tou sey, Miller and Gill, and the Ore gon supporters began to worry. But the rally was stopped by an other of those frequent Aggie fum bles. This time it was Tousey who muffed the ball. He did It on the Oregon 26-yard line and the tow headed Spears was once more the Oregon man of the hour. Spears dived in and got the fumble and Oregon's worries were over for the day. Chapman Falls In Kick. Later in the same quarter Chap man made an abortive attempt at a second field goal. This time he tried a kick from the O. A. C. 41 yard line. His thump was true enough, but it fell short. In the third quarter Chapman tried a third kick from placement, but it was an utter failure. He wasn't able even to get the ball away. A poor pass from the center to the man who was to place the hall was responsible. The pass was . high and was fumbled and cost Ore gon 12 yards and the ball on downs, There was only one real breath- snatcher all afternoon. Big Hunk Latham, the Oregon fullback, con tributed that one in the third quar ter. Garber of the Aggies had made a fair catch of a punt, and Captain Locey elected for a free kick from his 30-yard line. Gill booted it SO yards to the Oregon 20, where Latham caught it near the side, line, 38-Yard Ron Is Made. Behind beautiful interference he crushed and twisted and wrenched his way for a 38-yard run through moBt of the Aggie team. He might be running yet but for the fact that his flight carried him across the field to the opposite sideline, where he was finally forced out of bounds. But pretty as the run was, Its net gain to Oregon as a scoring play was nothing. Pretty soon the burly Aggie linemen held up the attack again, and the usual punt ensued. Unable to gain consistently through the Oregon line on straight football, the Aggies pulled a little comedy stuff in this quarter, noth ing less tnan the "lock-step" play that Centre made famous by using against Harvard. The Aggie linemen placed their bands on each others' shoulders and with an imitation of the celebrated penitentiary one-step, paraded up past the ball, reversed and past it again. The Oregon line followed them. Suddenly one of the. Aggie ends seized the ball, flipped it quickly to McKenna and he plunged through a hole for seven yards. Freak la Tried Agaim The Aggies tried this freak again a little later, but this time the back- field was in motion that cost a five- yard penalty. A third time they used it and McKenna made a four-yard gain. Depend on it, though, the lock- step play will not revolutionize foot ball. It's a freak. It looked good once, but tried once, it was easy enough to solve. Neither team showed much in at tack. Oregon madie only four first downs from scrimmage and the Ag- gi-es three. Oregon gained 1461a yards in scrimmage plays and the Agg'ies 58. Oregon attempted seven forward passes, of which two were completed for 26 yards net, and the Aggies attempted 14 passes, com pleted three and netted 13 yards. Agrgiea Turn to Pnsalng-. Toward the end of the last quar ter the O. A. C. team turned every effort to forward passing, but those passed that did not go wild were intercepted or grounded by the Ore gon defensive backs. Where Oregon excelled today was in returning junts and following the ball, thus getting advantage of the breaks by recovering fumbles i and blocking punts. Gill outkicked) Chapman, but two of his punts were blocked to none for Chapman and the Oregon quarter more than made up for the ehorter distance of his kicksvby running back Gill's attempts. He gained 71 yards that way to none for O. A. C. That kind of yardage counts just a.- much as gains on line smashes. Today's victory by Oregon was the first for the Webfooters since 1919, when they won by a score of 9 to 0. In 1920 and last year the scores were 0 to 0. i A long-wrangle over officials pre ceded the game. 'Finally Ted Faulk, formerly of the University of Wash ington, ,was -agreed upon as referee, William Mulligan of Gonzaga as umpire and E. K. Perkins, University of Chicago, as head linesman. Then some objection was made and the whole thing was threshed out again. After a long squabble the selection stood and these offi cials handled the game. The attend ance was about 14,000. The lineup: O. A. C. Position McFadden L K Locey LT Ash LG... HJelte 1...C Clarke BO... Oregon . . . Spears . Campbell A. Shields . . Callison . . F. Shields Mickelwalt RT Yonder Ahe Scott RU Brown Garber Q Chapman Miller LH Gram Gill RH King Tousey Full Latham Substitutions- T. Johnson for Brown, McKenna for Garber, Tebb for Scott. Winne for Tousey, Lyman for Clark. Mc Cart for Gill, Rich for Hjelte. Day for Winne. Officials Ted Faulk, referee; William J mulligan, jk. ferklns, head linesmen. Score by quarters: Oregon 10 0 0 O. A. C 0 0 0 010 INVASION IS MIGHTY OXE Entire Eugene Student Body Travels to Corvallis Game. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu gene, Nov. 18. (Special.) The uni versity students effected a mighty invasion of the Beaver camp today when the entire student body board ed the special train or traveled by automobile to Corvallis. The lemon yellow colors reached the Aggie stronghold at 12:45 P. M. and were Immediately organized more . than 1600 strong into parade formation for the march to the field. The Oregonians were met by the Oregon Agricultural college band, which fol lowed the Oregon band, both of them leading the line of green and yellow capped fans. , The arrival of the Oregon rooters at Bell field was greeted by the shrieking Aggie siren. The O. A. C. spectators were already seated in their covered bleachers, the bcfVs adorned in the orange fizzes and the, ! 1 SkteM&l&isiais ASiiM3;i , i (.ram, Oregon halfoack, ploueha through for a train. Center Left, the ahock of a hard tackle cauaea an Oregon pluyer to fumble; right, Oregon Agrlcu ltural college co-eds add color to the rooting section vith their orange colored balloons. Below A little comedy stunt put on between halves. co-eds carrying pale orange bal loons. The lemon-yellow swarmed on to the field, lost for the moment as to where to take their placea. Then they bolted for the north bleachers like a bunch of wild colts and stormed the temporary struc ture. There were about a thousand varsity spectators in these orange seats. The Oregon women wwe given seats in the north end of the Beaver bleachers, and decorated with their yellow chrysanthemums RECORD OF EACH PLAY IN GRID CONTEST SHOWS HOW OREGON DEFEATED AGGIES No Scoring Done by Either Team in Last Three Quarters Eugene Eleven Gets Touchdown and Kicks Field Goal Players Thrown Several Times for Losses. BY PORTER TETT. CORVALLIS, Or., Nov. 18. (Special.) The detailed atory of the Oregon Oregon Aggies' football game here today follows: First Quarter. Shields kicked off to Garber, who punted back to O. A. C. 48 yards, where Vonder Ahe received it for Oregon. King made two yards through left tackle. Chapman hit right tackle for three yards. King hit right guard for one yard. Chapman ' kicked 25 yards to Oiirber, who fumbled. Latham recover ing ball out of bounds. Oregon's ball on O. A. C. 23-yard line. Chapman in completed forward pass. Latham and Chapman plunged through right tackle for four yards in two tries. Chapman p!ae kicked from 20-yard line. Score, Oregon 3, O. A. C. 0, AlacFadden kicked off to Oregon's 11 yard lin. Gram returned 11. Chapman circled O. A. C. left end for two yards. Oregon left end off side, five-yard pen alty; Chapman hit center for four yards; Chapman kicked 44 yards, no return. SUMMARY OF OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE-UNIVERSITY OF OREGON FOOTBALL GAME. BY PORTER YETT. First downs from scrimmage: O. A. C. Oregon. First quarter Second quarter Third quarter - Fourth quarter Total first downs from scrimmage 3.4' Total scrimmage plays 22 60 Total yardage from scrimmagre 68 146 Forward passes attempted 14 7 Forward passes completed 3 l Forward passes incompleted 10 6 Forward papses intercepted ,... 1 1 Yardage from passes 13 26 First downs from passes , 1 1 rentltics . . . .........-................... 2 S Total yards from passes and scrimmage 71 172 Yardage lost from penalties 20 . 50 First downs received from penalties 1 2 First downs lost on penalties ft i Number of punts 9 13 Yardage of punts 396 40o Average length of punts , 43.. 8 31.1 Total yardase punts retu-rned... ; i 16 87 Net vardage gained on punts and return of punts.:.... 0 71 Punts blocked 2 0 Yardage on kickoffs returned 6 25 Fumbles 4 4 Fumbles recovered 2 6 Ball lost on fumbles.... 2 1 Times out 4 4 Field goals attempted...- 1 2 Field gcals successful ; 0 1 Yardage gained from scrimmage plays by individual players: O. A. C. Tousel 12 Garber 3 Miller 4 Gill . 26 McKenna . . . 13 Winne 0 Day 0 Total ii the 8 TRAFFIC COPS OX DUTY Roads Leading to Corvallis Are Watched by State Officers. SALEM, Or., Nov. 18. (Special.) Eight state traffic officers working under the direction of T. A Raffety, chief inspector for the state motor. Time out for Oregon, Rud Brown in jured. Johnson replaced Brown at right end.-' ' Gill thrown for seven-yard loss, GUI made 11 yards around Oregon left end, Miller thrown for 11 yards loss; Gill kicked 41 yards to Chapman who re turned three yards. Latham no gain. Gram two yards around left end: Gram four yards around left end; Chapman punted 43 yards, no return. Gill lost two yards; O. A. C. punt blocked by Callison and Spear recovered for touchdown. Chapman con verted goaL Score, Oregon 10. O. A. C. 0. McFadden kicked off to Latham on Oregon 3o-yard line, Latham returned 14 yards; Oregon fumbled; Locey re covered oa Oregon's 39-yard line. Oregon offside, five-yard penalty; Oregon again offside, five-yard penalty. Miller no gain around left end. Gill lost four yards around Oregon right end. GUI failed to gain around Oregon left end. O. A. C. failed in attempted place kick from Ore gon 45-yard line.i Chapman kicked 45 yards to Garber, who returned five. Touey hit center for two yards. Gill hit same bole for 0 2 0 1 TL of O. Chapman 44 King 68 Latham ..... .' 15 Gram . , 19 Total 146 I-layed a pretty contrast to orange and black on their left. vehicle department, patrolled the roads leading into Corvallis, today. The occasion was the football game between the Oregon Agricultural college and University of Oregon and the annual home-coming of the former institution. Although thousands of automo biles were pressed into service by the football fans, there was no seri ous accident during the day. This was the Information received at the state traffic department tonight. seven more. Garber fumbled but re covered. Second Quarter. Miller made four yards and first down around left end.. Tousey hit right tackle for seven yards. Garber hit right tackle for one yard. Tousey hit the same hole three yards more and first down. Gill two yards through right tackle. Miller no gain. Oregon offside, five-yard pen alty. O. A. C. first down Oregon 27 yard line. Miller no gain around left end. Tousey fumbled and Spear recov ered on O. A. C. 26-yard line. Gram hit center for one yard. Chap man made eight yards around right end. Tousey received 15-yard penalty for roughing Chapman. Gram lost two yards. Iwngr no sain through center. King no gain on crise-crosa. Chapman kicked 43 yards, Garber failing to pick the ball up. Garber did not attempt to receive punts ince he fumbled the first one. Gill kicked 42 yards to Chapman, who returned 5. King made 1 "yard otf right tackle. Gram hit center for 4 yarda O. A. C. offside, ft-yard penalty. Oregon first down on O. A. & 35-yard line. Chapman made .2 yards through right tackle. King 2 yards through center. Oregon fumbled. King recovered. Chap man kicked over goal line. Bell re turned .to O. A. C. 20-yard line. Gill kicked 42 yards to Chapman, vho returned 12 yards. King hit center for 3 yards. Chapman fumbled but recov ered for a 10-yard loss. Chapman kicked 30 yards to Gill, who returned 2 yards. Gill made 4 yards around right end. Gill fumbled, -"Tiny" Shields recovered. Oregon incomplete paBs. Chapman hit centjer for 2 yards. Guam hit left tackle for 3 yarda Chapman failed In at tempted place' kick. Gill made 1 yard around left end. Garber 2 yards around right end. Half ended with the ball In O. A- C. possession on their own 23-yard line. - Score: Oregon 10, O. A. C. 0. Third Quarter. MacFadden kicked off over the goal line. Oregcm put the ball on scrimmage on her own 20-yard line. Chapman circled right end for B yards. Latham hit center for 2 Tarda. King made 13 yards through right tackle on a criss-cross play. Gram hit center for 2 yards. Latham 2 yards around right end. Latham forced out of bounds. Latham 1 yard through left tackle. Chapman kicked to 36-yard line to Garber. Gill thrown for a loss of 5 yards. Gill kicked to Chapman 40 - yards, who re turned 11 yards. Chapman no gain Latham passed to Gram over right end for 20 yards. Chapman lost 6 yards on a criss-cross. Time out, Scott in jured. Incomplete pass. Gram 1 yard aroucrd left end. Gram fumbled on at tempted place kick. It was a bad pass. Gill 2 yards. Incompleted forward pass Gill kicked 47 yards to Chapman, who returned 11 yards. King hit right tackle for two yarda Gram hit center for three yards. Chap man hit right tackle for two yards. Time out. Spear and Tousey hurt. Chapman kicked 25 yards to Garber,. who signaled tor a free catch. O. A. C. elected to free kick. Gill kicked 50 yards to Latham, who returned 38 yarda Gram hit center for one yard. Chapman hit center for two yards. Incompleted 'paea (Latham); Chapman kicked 25 yards. McKenna re placed Garber. Gill lust yarda, MUlec no gain. Gill kicked 4T yards to Chap man, who returned ten. King bit center for seven yards. Chap man one yard around right end. Latham hit center nine yards and first down. Tebb went In for Scott. Chapman one yard through right tackle. Oregon off side, five-yard penalty. McFadden Inter cepted Latham's pass. O. A. C. incom plete forward paA. McKenna seven yards on famous lockatep play used by the praying colonels of Centre college. Tousey replaced by Winne. Forward pass. Gill to McKenna, three yards and first down. MfiKenna one yard through center. Glil failed on two attempted passes. Gill kicked 2,i yards to Lathan, who re turned five yarda Quarter ended, score Oregon 10, O, A. C. 0. Fourth Quarter. Gram no gain. Latham lost four yards around ri&bjt end. King hit right tackle for 14 yards and first down. Chapman plunged through for center one yard. Gram one yard around right end. King five yarda through right tackle. King hit center for two yards and first down. Lyman replaced Clark. Oregon penal ized for taking time out. Latham no gain. Oregon fumbled but recovered. King hit right tackle for four yards. Champion kicked 10 yards. Oregon re ceived a five-yard penalty for falling on ball. McKenna one yard through right tackle. O. A. C. penalized five yards for back field being motion on Sing-Sing play. Forward pass Gill to Winne four yards. Latham intercepted O. A. C. pass. King made five yards off right tackle. Latham no gain through right tackle. Oregon penalized 15 yards for holding after. King had made six yards and first down. King hit right tackle for three yarda Chapman kicked 27 yards to M:c Kenna. who returned five yards. O. A. C. pass Incomplete. McKenna made one yard around right end. In completed pass. Spear recovered an other kick blocked by Shields. Forward pass. Chapman to Latham, six yards. King hit right tackle for half yard. King hit center for one yard. Chapman made one yard around right end. O. A. C. ball on downs. Gill thrown for one-yarcf loss. Gill kicked 81 yards to Chapman. Chapman circled right end for six yards. King plunged through center for two yards. King no gain. Chapman kicked 25 yards to McKenna, who re turned four yards. Glil made one yard through center. Forward pass. GUI to Tebb, for six yards. McKenna gained four yards and first down throug center on Center's lock etep play. Oregon offside, five-yard penalty. " O. A. C. incompleted pass. Time out. O. A. C. McCart substituted for Miller, Rich for Hjelte, Day for Winne. O. A. C. lost the ball to Oregon on their 29-yard line after three at tempted passes. Chapman hit tackle for one yard. King plunged through cen ter for one yard as the game ended with the ball in Oregon's possession on O. A. C. 33-yard line. Final acore: Ore gon in. O. A C ft. Pyorrhea Now Can JJe Cured Free Sample of Wonderful Guaranteed Home Treatment. Every sufferer from Pyorrhea, Bleeding and Ulcerated .Gums, Loose Teeth and other sore and diseased conditions of the mouth, Fhould ac cept this offer without delay. end your name and address today to Moore's Laboratories, Dept. 6844, Kansas City, Mo., and they will mail you Sample Treatment, postpaid, ab solutely free. Judge Its merits for yourself. Also free booklet and his tory of remarkable cures. This sim ple home treatment is indorsed by many leading Dentists and Doctors as being the most efficient method known, to control these dread con ditions. Adv. . BOSTON'S GREAT ART PRODUCT Pianos It is impossible to convey in words an adequate idea of the surpassing tonal quality of the Mason & Hamlin Piano. To say that the piano is made as well as possible, and priced afterward that does not tell the story. No description of the Tension Resonator can adequately explain its importance in terms of tonal results. Even the marshalled names of artists who have chosen the Mason & Hamlin Piano for their public and private use can only indirectly show its excellence. And yet, that which is difficult to put into words is a very real thing. If you should play the Mason & Hamlin Piano you would know Listening to it would tell more than a thousand words, as a glance at the 'Woman Weighing Pearls" tells more of Vermeer's artistry than page after page of description. WTe invite you to play and hear this extraordinary piano. MASON & HAMLIN PIANOS 148 Fifth Street, A Little Cash Works Wonders at Our Store Look Over the Following Specials for This Week Thrift is fast becoming a national habit. The first step in this direction is to put yourself on a cash basis. That's the secret of our special sales of furniture, etc. We buy for cash and on these special sales we sell for cash at jobbing prices. BLANKETS Plaid wool and cotton mixed in pink, blue, gray and tan. $8.50 quality for $r.85 only O $9.75 quality for $f7.25 only I $11.50 plaid wool Blankets, colors same as ij0.85 above ; . O $10.00 plaid Hud- $f7.90 son Bays $10.00 wool, gray, SO for' only Beds, Springs, Mattresses and Pillows in this sale. Every one a bargain. When Your Friends Assemble at Your Home you will be proud to possess one of our solid walnut dining suites in the beautiful Queen Anne design, which is the daintiest of period designs. a-i wf T? 111 W' fl; , W l M A 54-inch top, solid walnut, extends to 6 feet. A .00 Regular value $72.00. Sale price O1: $74.00 Buffet to match , Xrj.50 for only O I $58.50 set of 6 chairs to match, with blue A q.50 leather seats xt) A large assortment of Dining Suites from which to select--, all of which we offer in this pre-Thanksgiving Sale. ieri; Near Morrison COMFORTS $16.00 fine wool 5-pound weight, .for 1 O.50 only JLjmI $14.50 fine cotton, To Warm brand, for $Q.75 only $8.50 fine white $.40 cotton, only 0 $5.50 quality for A .25 only ...i $4.25 quality for $Q.25 only O $19.50 fiber silk cover and 3-pound pure $-1 r. 00 wool filling JLtl